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Table of contents :
Frontmatter
List of Figures (page ix)
Acknowledgments (page xiii)
Abbreviations and a Note on Dating (page xv)
Introduction (page 3)
Map: The Ritual Geography of Venice (page 9)
PART ONE: MYTH AND RITUAL
One: The Myth of Venice
The Meaning of the Myth (page 13)
Historiography of the Myth (page 23)
Myth and Reality (page 34)
The Myth Abroad (page 44)
From Myth to Ritual or from Ritual to Myth? (page 55)
PART TWO: AN INHERITANCE OF LEGEND AND RITUAL
Two: An Escaped Trojan and a Transported Evangelist: Auspicious Beginnings
The Legends of the Origins of Venice (page 65)
The Festive Calendar (page 74)
Pax Tibi Marce Evangelista Meus (page 78)
Saints Theodore, George, and Nicholas (page 92)
Three: A Grateful Pope and a Dowered Bride: Imperial Prerogatives
The Donation of Pope Alexander III (page 103)
The Marriage of the Sea (page 119)
Four: Twelve Wooden Marys and a Fat Thursday: A Serene Society
The Doge's Annual Visit to Santa Maria Formosa (page 135)
Giovedi Grasso and the Carnival Season (page 156)
PART THREE: GOVERNMENT BY RITUAL
Five: A Republic of Processions
From Theory to Practice (page 185)
The Ducal Procession (page 189)
Six: The Ritual Occasion
Annual Observances (page 212)
Corpus Christi (page 223)
Special Observances (page 231)
Seven: The Paradoxical Prince
The Doge as Primus Inter Pares and as Princeps (page 251)
The Funeral and Coronation of the Doge (page 263)
The Dogaressa (page 289)
Conclusion (page 299)
Manuscript Sources (page 307)
Bibliography (page 310)
Index (page 343)
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CIVIC RITUAL IN RENAISSANCE VENICE

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CIVIC

RITUAL IN RENAISSANCE VENICE

ite

EDWARD MUIR

COPYRIGHT 1981 BY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PUBLISHED BY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, PRINCETON NEW JERSEY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM: PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, CHICHESTER, WEST SUSSEX

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED :

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA WILL BE FOUND ON THE LAST PRINTED PAGE OF THIS BOOK PUBLICATION OF THIS BOOK WAS ASSISTED BY A GRANT FROM THE PUBLICATIONS

PROGRAM OF THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES THIS BOOK HAS BEEN COMPOSED IN VIP ALDUS PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS BOOKS ARE PRINTED ON ACID-FREE PAPER

AND MEET THE GUIDELINES FOR PERMANENCE AND DURABILITY OF THE COMMITTEE ON PRODUCTION GUIDELINES FOR BOOK LONGEVITY OF THE COUNCIL ON LIBRARY RESOURCES PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

10 9 8 7 6 5 4

| ANNETTE FOR

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CONTENTS

LIST OF FIGURES 1X ACKNOWLEDGMENTS X1ll ABBREVIATIONS AND A NOTE ON DATING XV

INTRODUCTION 3 Map: The Ritual Geography of Venice 9 PART ONE:

MYTH AND RITUAL

ONE + THE MyTHOF VENICE , The Meaning of the Myth 13 Historiography of the Myth 23

MythMyth and Abroad Reality 34 The 44 From Myth to Ritual or from Ritual to Myth? 55 PART TWO:

AN INHERITANCE OF LEGEND AND RITUAL TWo « AN EscAPED TROJAN AND A TRANSPORTED EVANGELIST:

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

The Legends of the Origins of Venice 65 The Festive Calendar 74 : Pax Tibi Marce Evangelista Meus 78 Saints Theodore, George, and Nicholas 92 THREE « A GRATEFUL POPE AND A DOWERED BRIDE: IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

The Donation of Pope Alexander III 103 The Marriage of the Sea 119 , FOUR + TWELVE WoopEN MArys AND A FAT THURSDAY: A SERENE SOCIETY

The Doge’s Annual Visit to Santa Maria Formosa 135

Giovedi Grasso and the Carnival Season 156 PART THREE:

GOVERNMENT BY RITUAL FIVE «© A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS

FromDucal TheoryProcession to Practice 189 185 The

7 viii CONTENTS Stx + THE RituAL OCCASION

Annual Observances 212 CorpusObservances Christi 223 Special 231

SEVEN * THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

The Doge as Primus Inter Pares and as Princeps 251

The Dogaressa 289 The Funeral and Coronation of the Doge 263

CONCLUSION 299

MANUSCRIPT SOURCES 307

INDEX 343

BIBLIOGRAPHY 310

LIST OF FIGURES | 1. Leandro Bassano, Pope Alexander III Gives the White

Candle to Doge Sebastiano Ziani in San Marco, after , 1578, oil on canvas in the Hall of the Great Council,

Ducal Palace (photo: Palazzo Ducale) _ 110 , 2. Francesco Bassano, At the Point of Departing with the Armada against Barbarossa, Doge Sebastiano Ziani Re-

_ceives the Sword from Pope Alexander III, after 1578, oil on canvas in the Hall of the Great Council, Ducal

Palace (photo: Palazzo Ducale) 110

3. Andrea Michieli, called “il Vicentino,” Doge Sebas-

tiano Ziani Presents Otto to Pope Alexander III and Re-

| -ceives the Ring with Which He Celebrates the Marriage of the Sea Every Year, after 1578, oil on canvas in the

azzo Ducale) 111 Hall of the Great Council, Ducal Palace (photo: Pal-

4. Girolamo Gambarato, Accompanied by Frederick Barbarossa and Doge Sebastiano Ziani, Pope Alexander III Arrives at Ancona and Gives to Ziani a Golden Umbrella, after 1578, oil on canvas in the Hall of the Great

Council, Ducal Palace (photo: Palazzo Ducale) 111 5. Giacomo Franco, On Ascension Day the Doge in the

Bucintoro Is Rowed to the Marriage of the Sea, engrav- |

. ing, plate xxix in Franco's Habiti d’huomeni et donne venetiane con la processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] (Courtesy of New York Public Library, Spencer Collection,

Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations) 123 6. Giacomo Franco, Giovedi Grasso Celebrations in Mem-

ory of the Victory of the Republic over the Patriarch of | Aquileia in Friuli, engraving, plate xxviin Franco's Habiti d’'huomeni et donne venetiane con la processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] (Courtesy of New York Public Li-

Foundations) 165

brary, Spencer Collection, Astor, Lenox and Tilden

Xx

LIST OF FIGURES

7. A,B,C, D. Matteo Pagan, The Procession of the Doge on | Palm Sunday, 1556-59, engraving (photo: Museo

Civico Correr) 194-197

8. Cesare Vecellio, Procession in Piazza San Marco, 1586,

oil on canvas in the Museo Civico Correr (photo:

Museo Civico Correr) | 210

9. Frontispiece of a pamphlet containing poetic paraphrases of the Psalms of David, published in Venice in 1571 in honor of the Holy League’s victory at Lepanto

clana) 215

against the Turks. In the Biblioteca Nazionale Mar- ciana, Misc. 2096/4 (photo: Biblioteca Nazionale Mar10. Giacomo Franco, The Procession of Corpus Christi, en-

graving, Plate xxv in Franco's Habiti d’huomeni et donne venetiane con la processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] 228

11. Andrea Michieli, called “il Vicentino,” Visit of King Henry III to Venice in 1574, oil on canvas in the epis-

copal residence of Litoméfice (Leitmeritz), Bohemia :

(photo: Narodni Galerie, Prague) 236

12. Giacomo Franco, Procession for the Consignment of the

Baton to the Captain General of the Sea, engraving, plate xxiin Franco’s Habiti d’huomeni et donne venetiane con la processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] (Cour-

tesy of New York Public Library, Spencer Collection, , Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations) 259

13. Giacomo Franco, Arsenal Sailors Carry the Doge-Elect, His Relatives, and the Admiral, Who Throw out Coins

to the Crowd before the Coronation, engraving, plate xx in Franco's Habiti d’huomeni et donne venetiane con la processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] (Courtesy of New

| York Public Library, Spencer Collection, Astor, Lenox

and Tilden Foundations) 287

X1

LIST OF FIGURES 14. Giacomo Franco, The Dogaressa aboard the Bucintoro and Accompanied by Other Noble Ladies Goes from Her

Palace to the Ducal Palace, engraving, plate xxx! in | ; Franco's Habiti d’huomeni et donne venetiane con la

processione della serenissima signoria et altri particolari cioé trionfi feste cerimonie publiche della nobilissima | citta di Venetia, Venice, 160[?] (Courtesy of New York Public Library, Spencer Collection, Astor, Lenox and

Tilden Foundations) 297

15. Andrea Michieli, called “il Vicentino,” The Coronation

Correr) 298

‘of Dogaressa Morosina Grimani, after 1597, oil on can- | vas in the Museo Civico Correr (photo: Museo Civico

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The second section of chapter seven, entitled “The Funeral and Coronation of the Doge,” is a revised and amplified version of an article first published as “The Doge as Primus Inter Pares: Interregnum Rites in Early Sixteenth-Century Venice,” in Essays Presented to Myron P. Gilmore, edited by Sergio Bertelli

and Gloria Ramakus, Florence, 1978, 1:145—60. I wish to |

thank “La Nuova Italia” Editrice, Florence, for permission to republish the essay here. In revising this section, I have benefited from the comments and criticisms of Robert Finlay, Felix Gilbert, and Donald Queller, who have led me to modify my

views somewhat on the actual powers of the sixteenth-century | doges.

In the course of researching and writing this book, I have enjoyed aid and encouragement from several sources, which deserve my thanks. I thank first of all my mother for introducing me to Tosca and Titian, thus determining my bent toward things Italian, and my father for cheerfully helping me through the lean years of graduate school and research in Venice. While writing my dissertation, I spent an invigorating year as a fellow at the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies at Villa I Tatti, Florence, with a stipend from the Committee

to Rescue Italian Art. Our hosts, Sheila and the late Myron Gilmore, created a congenial community that will always be * fondly remembered. Since then, I have received a summer sti-

pend from the National Endowment for the Humanities and a Research Fellowship for Recent Recipients of the Ph.D. from

, the American Council of Learned Societies, for which Syracuse University graciously granted me a semester's leave. Over the - years numerous acquaintances, colleagues, and friends have made suggestions, passed on references, pointed out my stupid-

ities, and provoked me to revise my interpretations. I must

thank William Brown, Peter Burke, Demetrios Constantelos, : Paul Grendler, Deborah Howard, Norman Land, Christopher Lloyd, Oliver Logan, William Lubenow, Michael Mallett, Mar-

garet Marsh, Reinhold Mueller, Kenneth Pennington, James

X1v

| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS , Powell, Guido, Ruggiero, and James Williamson. Olga Pumanova of the Narodni Galerie, Prague, kindly provided me with a photograph of the Andrea Michieli (“il Vicentino”) painting in the episcopal residence of Litomérice (Leitmeritz), Bohemia. In Venice the informed help of the personnel of the Archivio di Stato, Biblioteca del Museo Civico Correr, Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, Biblioteca Querini Stampalia, and Fondazione Giorgio Cini solved many of my problems; Dottoressa Maria Francesca Tiepolo has earned my special regards for her generosity in guiding me through the Archivio di Stato. Richard Trexler’s advice on various theoretical and practical problems in the interpretation of ritual has been invaluable. A constant intellectual companion over the last seven years who has listened to my inchoate ideas and read and commented on scattered bits and pieces of this book, David R. Edward Wright has influenced

my thinking in many subtle and, I am sure, unrecognized ways. At Princeton University Press Joanna Hitchcock, R. Miriam Brokaw, and especially William Hively made my manu-

script a book. My study of Venetian civic rituals began as a paper for a seminar led by Donald Weinstein; he has remained an unflagging guide, a mentor in the highest sense of the word, and will ever be il miglior fabbro. My wife, Annette, merits

more credit than a simple dedication. She helped in the research, especially in the tedious reading of the fifty-eight volumes of Marin Sanuto’s diaries, tendered suggestions and crit-

icisms at every stage, taught me how to write what I meant,

and held me to her uncompromising standards. I hope this book

may be a worthy offering. |

May 1980 EM.

ABBREVIATIONS ASF Archivio di Stato, Florence

ASV Archivio di Stato, Venice | BMV Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, Venice

MCV Biblioteca del Museo Civico Correr, Venice ONV_ Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna

| SUL Syracuse University Library, Syracuse, New York

A NOoTE ON DATING

All dates are given in the new style unless they are followed by

the abbreviation m.v., which stands for modo veneto. The Venetian style was to date the beginning of the year from March 1.

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CIVIC RITUAL IN RENAISSANCE VENICE

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INTRODUCTION On a spring afternoon in 1972, my wife and | sat at a table in

front of the minuscule neighborhood bar in Campo San Cassi- | ano, a drab but sunlit square in the working-class district of ~ Venice where we had by then lived for nine months. My wife, ever attracted to kindly old ladies, struck up a conversation with

two stout grandmothers who were enjoying their afternoon aperitif at the table next to us. We talked of Venice. In dialect punctuated by demands for the barman to supply the correct Italian words, the women told us about life in the parish where each had lived her entire eighty-odd years. One teased the other about the wanderlust that had caused her to move one street away from her birthplace and about the exotic taste that had influenced her to marry a straniero, a “foreigner” from Padua, some twenty miles distant. The other in turn lamented abandonment by her children, who had all moved to the Lido, fifteen minutes away by boat. It was clear that the parish was the extent of their world: one had never been to the mainland; the other had bothered to visit Piazza San Marco only a few times in her life. Their quiet parish was a place of great antiquity,

their church’ obscure patron saint protected his flock, the Vir- | gin’s presence was real, and the grandmothers knew who belonged with them and who did not. Their sense of space was

_ narrow and confined; but their knowledge of their place was intimate, their satisfaction with it complete, their love of it total. On a different continent two years later, I discussed with my

own octogenarian grandfather the impending fall of Richard Nixon. In canvassing the various political opinions of his generation, my grandfather mentioned that one of his relatives, a retired dentist living in a small town in rural Utah, claimed that Nixon was clearly God’s chosen vicar on earth, since all

Presidents were elected according to the divinely ordained prac- | tices of the Constitution. For this dentist, Nixon’s persecutors | in their attempts to unseat him had thus become instruments | of the Devil. This rather extreme opinion was, to be sure, a naive and antiquated notion of the theory of the divine right of

4

INTRODUCTION

rulers, but I suppose more than one of my grandfather's compatriots shared this belief. For the dentist, the incumbent and the office were inseparably bonded; the sanctity of the office

had suffused the man, Richard Nixon.

The convictions of the Venetian grandmothers and the Utah

dentist attest to the continued existence of two fundamental patterns of thought—mentalities, if one will—that seem little altered by short-term events and that persist through the very long dimension of time measured by millennia.’ My informers disclosed, in the first case, parochialism—the affective identifi-

cation of the self with a particular, geographically defined place—and, in the second, a belief in the sacred nature of institutions and leaders, an attitude that invests things and persons

political with a mystical aura, distinguishing them from mundane structures and from ordinary mortals. These two

Renaissance. ,

mentalities, of course, were even more widespread during the It has long been supposed that the glorification of civic life in Renaissance Italy flourished best under conditions of urban in-

dependence and republican political activity. In Italy from at least the time of Coluccio Salutati and Leonardo Bruni, la vita civile stood for an ideology about civilization and about life itself, an ideal that proposed that only complete immersion in the affairs of one’s community and one’s city could lead to a superior life and to a sense of satisfaction and completion.* Even today, for the citizens of many Italian towns, the responsibility,

commitment, and group identification that is associated with membership in a local community reaches far beyond parochialism: community life is often seen as the very essence of — civilta.* And for Italians civilta is a word more manifold with "Fernand Braudel, “History and the Social Sciences.” My thinking about the units of historical time has been further stimulated by the comments Immanuel Wallerstein made at the symposium on “Historical and Sociologi-

cal Perspectives on Change and Continuity” at the Maxwell School Day,

Syracuse University, November 30, 1977. |

*Perhaps the most notable among the large number of studies that reflect this point of view are those by Hans Baron, The Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance, and by William J. Bouwsma, Venice and the Defense of Republican Liberty.

°Sydel Silverman, Three Bells of Civilization.

5

INTRODUCTION

affective meanings than its much abused English translation,

“civilization.” |

In Renaissance Venice, a particularly glittering temple to civilta, an intense community life seems to have been fostered by an intricate design of civic rituals, which succeeded in melding parochialism and the tendency to hold certain offices and institutions sacred into an unusually vibrant and durable civic patriotism. In the great cycle of civic rituals may be read a story

created by the Venetians about their own political and social world. And beyond this, in the rituals and their accompanying legends may lie a clue to the rise of a republican political ideology often called “the myth of Venice,” which endures as Venice’s lasting contribution to the political ideals of the Western world.

Civic ritual in Venice was a peculiar hybrid of liturgical and

ceremonial elements, taken from diverse sources, that prospered in the Venetian community. These regular communal affairs reveal an indigenous civic identity and ideology based upon a broad consensus about social values. Civic rituals were commentaries on the city, its internal dynamics, and its relationship with the outside world. In commenting upon civic realities, the rituals illustrated an ideal arrangement of human relationships, created a homily that stimulated or altered some formal political and social ideas, and provided a medium for discourse among the constituent classes and between the literate elite and the masses.* Although civic rituals often served

‘the rulers’ interests, they were not just propaganda and did not | pass messages only in one direction. The study of civic ritual might, therefore, allow one to discover changes and continuities over a long period of time in the self-perceptions of a large

social group. ,

The historian of civic ritual attempts to decipher complexly evolved patterns of behavior. Civic time is the first considera-

tion. It appears that feast days in Venice and the events they commemorated, the commune’s designation of new feast days and its obliteration of others, and a particularly Venetian use of *Cf. Natalie Zemon Davis, “Some Tasks and Themes in the Study of Popular Religion,” p. 318.

6

INTRODUCTION

the liturgical calendar supplied an important temporal frame for Venetian civic life. Second, the historian pursues the notion of civic space as it was expressed in rituals. The Venetian re-

gime’s creation of certain specialized ritual territories and processional routes, its recognition of ritual centers and borders

in the city, and its maintenance or suppression of ritual relationships between the central authority and the geographical

subdivisions of the city—the neighborhoods and parishes—in- | dicate an increasingly political use of space. Third, he looks for changes in the aggregate number and frequency of rituals over

a specific period of time. The results of such a search might test | the commonly asserted hypothesis that modernity and ritual

are incompatible and that the rise of the modern world was | accompanied by a decline in ritual. Fourth, the historian seeks evidence for the “laicization” or “secularization” of ritual. Laicization, in this context, refers to the replacement of ecclesias-. tics with laymen as ritual specialists and as spiritual instructors. Secularization implies not the old Burckhardtian notion

that a secular world view was opposed to and replaced a reli- ,

gious one, but rather, in the words of Donald Weinstein, “. . . the transfer of the scene of religious ritual from reserved monastic or ecclesiastical space to public, civic space. . . [and] the religious legitimation of formerly worldly and temporal activities and institutions.”® In Venice there was an ancient tendency to attribute holiness to secular leaders; hence this study tries to identify which secular institutions in Venice became sacred, and when. The peculiar legalisms found in ceremonies are a fifth concern. In numerous medieval and Renaissance examples, legal and “constitutional” precepts and precedents found expression in ceremony long before they were written down in formal codes; and Venice, it seems, was indeed no stranger to

the habit of ceremonial law. Sixth, the historian of civic ritual |

investigates how ceremonies may reveal the citizens’ own sense

of their city’s relations with the outside world, relations that the Venetians saw by and large in imperial terms. A seventh inquiry traces the emergence, suppression, or alteration in the ‘Donald Weinstein, “Critical Issues in the Study of Civic Religion in Renaissance Florence,” pp. 266-67.

7

INTRODUCTION

ritual representation of specific social groups. In Venice one

finds that the legally defined social classes, the patrilineal fam- | ily, age groups, and women all shared varying degrees of ritual recognition that marked their place in the political and social organization of the city. And last, the historian of civic ritual must attempt to compare the ideas he finds represented in rit-

uals with those transmitted in other ways, as in literature, formal political thought, and the visual arts. The following text offers a detailed deciphering of Venetian civic ritual, beginning with a discussion of the myth of Venice.

The mythology will be familiar to most Italian Renaissance scholars, particularly to Venetian specialists; but Part One is

organized to show a kaleidoscopic image of the myth of Venice : | as our point of view shifts from the perspectives of the Venetians themselves, their contemporaries, and their admirers and critics at home and abroad to those of modern historians and students of ritual. Part Two describes the legends and rituals inherited by the Renaissance Venetians, especially those who

lived in the sixteenth century, although there are numerous excursions, when possible, into earlier periods. Here one finds that the Renaissance republican ideology germinated from the medieval civic liturgy. Part Three focuses on the ceremonies

that involved the doge, the princely but republican head of Venetian government, and, in order to define the structure of _ the Venetian commonwealth, analyzes the political and social _functions of public ceremony as celebrated in the sixteenth century. The meaning of civic rituals no doubt changed in the centu-

ries between their inception and the sixteenth century, but, sadly, the existing documents do not allow a comprehensive study of such mutations.® This book must therefore offer a somewhat limited interpretation of the Venetian rituals and legends as known during the Cinquecento. Whenever possible I have relied directly on the testimony of contemporary Venetians; when the Venetians were mute, I have sought the opinions of foreigners; when these too have failed, I have offered 6This opinion is confirmed by Gina Fasoli, “Liturgia e cerimoniale ducale,” 1:261.

INTRODUCTION | 8

| hypothetical interpretations consonant with the political and social assumptions of the period. In addition, I have tried,

wherever appropriate, to elucidate social functions and mental- | ities of which the Venetians were no doubt unconscious. Even the Venetians themselves did not always agree on the precise meaning of discrete rites and, in particular, offered variant ver-

| sions of the origins of rituals; so in most cases I have used the official interpretations of civic ritual found in state papers and

patrician commentaries. Finally, though I have deliberately sought the voices of the opposition and the alienated, I have found little evidence of a counter-ideology that had a wide fol-

lowing in Venice. Instead I have found that throughout the sixteenth century civic rituals presented a carefully arranged

portrait of a remarkably well-ordered society, a large and con- | vincing tableau that unfolded the myth of Venice.

ee. _. 8 —-— Marriage of the Sea Route — (SN S mmmn restvalof the twelve marys, candlomas Route Pr” verre Preesscution Parade of a Condemned Murderess

ee Pe ,: EEN . er.weet i Sa-—ChChC Se es ee eey, A SES ————“ —“ Ce eee EeSeSS eg LEE Noa PSS SS log fitten, NL ke eee . San Giacomo \. |: 0 Polo lo) ae for that year eS Pe gn Salvatore “. / cc Le . ge \ Basilica San Marco l ——a-_ SG ee Eeae _SanNg Ducal1%.Palace Ay: Ee Seana ae eee Geminianog es Molo ao / | eae ee CF na £LF omini ae Nye - SC“ LUC Ra DSacR RSS aS SERRE ae a8eS * antiER_OEOCDGG$§E Apostoli er Rea eae RSENS ate eaeacente NS am eCOC £ FONDAMENTA : wo NASA ec 8ee ©OCRU PSS pg Teeweeee® coeSS° 6Santi RIE peeing ee RTESSE SANCOE SIMEONE 7 NV: Sp Giovanni boats ~ from the SSS 2 contrade in chargeSee fino og ey . ef ondaco ; (or Zanipolo) i) coe GE pp fesse tadeaens reco necneagnastaasur nc increta ieee

SAN POLO os ot ~~ Qe! Tedeschi ®Santa So) a Pe vRE Bed : ~\Lee yCAMPO Giustina “SoFormosa 2 boats from in charge i): Ee:EES an ®: Santa Maria / Fbtheee2 contrade 00 cececccsceny

Se SER Sa PIAZZA SAN MARCO, - aight a San Zaccaria 5 | OS NS

CII SI Bry . aeBaaeSantaSRA erm hatscE4| iyiWeietro 2 SSIES ey San Nicolé dei Mendicoli Maria PIAZZETTA“$¥ di Pe

Bepeat am YA,Maria (or Zobenigo) Seer NS SE eo Scuola Grande di arti MEME eT SL EA i : Oe oc Santa 3 Sha NS ea Se Oe della Carita = @ Ns > J So pe San Salutes. Vito santa LCBSEN u Ce Sc ee della 0 SeMaria RN ve,rrr ee N Sees SL BBA thON eae olum ROAR NO eae CICS a Castello ce trntisneisinennnen Sonera EENf CURT, AS e Oh, igtto Justice any SN—RRS SE PIE en TEI ‘sg cies v eee eae ae een eneeena

Peeee Seee SeSan ee, |*oinrgio oe ee, :RN PS ONS ee ee 5eeORO, UNG) pO PRO ee Slo SY f eeLea oeeeNie Cong oe f/fElenag@\ NNN oye i ANN ooceeEe jase ae eee cg Me IN Na et Sant’ ee =| // P redentore _ ©. dm ye ee ce), KN Oe site of the marriage ee f:(~ 4 _ i -~ -.2 the mouth of the lagoon’ Oe meee =< § © — iccat

Ey — cr _- = —

YT CS Le r—“ Martin da Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 6.

67

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

describes the destruction of Troy, the escape to Italy of Trojan , nobles under the leadership of Antenor, and the settling of Padua.® Both writers were, of course, appending details to the passage in the Aeneid—then accepted as authentic history—

that referred to Antenor’s displaced band of Trojans as the founders of Padua.’ Official support of the Trojan myth in Venice often fluctuated according to existing diplomatic relations between the two cities, until Padua finally came under inexorable Venetian domination in the early fifteenth century.

A sixteenth-century Latin poem by Semusovio, a Pole, de- | scribes tapestries in the apartments of the doge that depicted the Trojan origins of the Venetians, and, in a seventeenth-century history of the confrontation between Emperor Frederick

Barbarossa and Pope Alexander III, the author attributes to Barbarossa a speech in which the Venetians and Trojans are explicitly compared.®

The attractions of the Trojan myth are easy to see. The Trojans were widely interpreted as a people who had never paid

tribute to anyone and who had been willing to abandon even their city in order to preserve their freedom. Trojan roots gave

the Venetians a claim both to great antiquity, therefore pri6 BMV, MS Italiano x1, 124 (6802), fol. 41r-v.

” Antenor potuit, mediis elapsus Achivis, Illyricos penetrare sinus atque intima tutus regna Liburnorum et fontem superare Timavi,

_ unde per ora novem vasto cum murmure montis it mare proroptum et pelago premit arva sonanti hic tamen ille urbem Patavi sedesque locavit Teucrorum et genti nomen dedit armaque fixit Troia, nunc placida compostus pace quiescit. Virgil, Aeneid 1.242—49. For a typical example of the Venetian adaptation of

this story see Marc Antonio Sabellico, Le historie vinitiane, fols. 2r—4v. CE. | Pietro Giustiniano, Dell’historie venetiane, pp. 3—5. Bardi argued that the Trojans settled Antenorida, later called Altino, not Padua, which was settled by Patavio, the king of the Veneti. Delle cose notabili, p. 4. * Bilinski, “Venezia nelle peregrinazioni polacche,” p. 269. Barbarossa’s speech to his son Otto reads, “Gli disse non haver dubitatione, che un‘altro sforzo sara apparecchiato per rinfrancar la fatta perdittione, galee armaro contra de Venetiani, che li disfaro come furo Troiani.” Brandimarte Franconi Ferrarese, Historia di Papa Alessand. III et di Fedrico Barbarossa imperatore, no pagination.

68

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

macy, and to the purest noble blood, untainted by intermar_ riage with barbarians. The Venetians, moreover, were not alone as aspirants to this glorious past: others, besides the Este, that celebrated Trojan ties were Mantua, Modena, Piacenza, Parma,

Imola, Pisa, Prato, Fiesole, Paris, France, Brittany, the Vis- , conti, and, of course, Rome.?

Once the noble origins of the Venetian people were established, the myth-makers had to explain the migration from the

fertile plains of the terraferma to the barren lagoon. One pop-. | ular saga in this second category of legends claimed that during the Italian campaign of Attila many refugees from Venetia fled to the sparsely populated islands in the peaceful lagoons at the

head of the Adriatic. Bernardo Giustiniani wrote that among these immigrants were nobles from Padua whom God had cho-

sen to found a new city that would become the heir to a justly punished Rome.!° The eventual success of Pope Leo I in halting Attila’s conquest of Italy added a religious, perhaps even miraculous, element to the events.'’ Attila thus achieved an impor-

tant niche in Christian history, and the Venetians so astutely developed and preserved the story of Venice’s founding by refugees from Attila that the episode became part of the modern

European mythical heritage. In 1622 Sir Henry Wotton described the origins of Venice in a letter to the Marquess of Buckingham and thereby revealed the mythic use of the Attila legend. How they came to be founded in the midst of the waters

I could never meet with any clear memorial. The best and _ most of their authors ascribe their first beginnings rather to chance or necessity, than counsel; which yet in my opinion will amount to no more than a pretty conjecture inte-

nebrated by antiquity, for thus they deliver it: they say ,

that among the tumults of the middle age, when nations went about swarming like bees, Atylas, the great captain

* Lanzoni, Genesi delle leggende storiche, p. 77.

10 Labalme, Bernardo Giustiniani, pp. 265-66. In a letter to the doge of Venice dated 1077, Pope Gregory VII said that the liberty of the Venetians came from their roots in the Roman nobility. C. Davis, “Roman Patriotism and Republican Propaganda,” p. 428. 1! Roberto Cessi, Le origini del ducato veneziano, p. 15.

, 69 AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS of the Hunnes, and scourge of the world (as he was styled)

lying along with a numerous army at the siege of Aquileia, | it struck a mighty affrightment and confusion into all the nearer parts. Whereupon the best sort of the bordering people out of divers towns, agreed either suddenly, or by little and little (as fear will sometimes collect, as well as distract) to convey themselves and their substance into the

uttermost bosom of the Adriatick Gulf, and there possessed certain desolate islets, by tradition about seventy in number, which afterwards (necessity being the mother of

| art) were tacked together with bridges, and so the city took a rude form, which grew civilized with time, and became a great example what the smallest things well fomented may prove.

They glory in this their beginning two ways. First, that surely their progenitors were not of the meanest and basest quality (for such having little to lose had as little cause

to remove). Next, that they were timely instructed with | temperance and penury (the nurses of moderation). And true it is, that as all things savour of their first principles, so doth the said Republic (as I shall afterwards show) even

at this day; for the rule will hold as well in civil as in natural causes.”

The Attila myth survived even the republic: during the Austrian occupation of Venice in the nineteenth century, Verdi chose the Attila legend for an opera that slipped risorgimento propaganda past the censors of the modern “Huns.” Although such legends make good propaganda and good theater, they are not history. According to Roberto Cessi, even though Attila’s

armies tramped through Venetia and besieged Aquileia, his men were warriors, not settlers, and most of the effects of their ravaging were temporary; so, even if a considerable number of people did indeed abandon their homes on the terraferma for the safety of the lagoon, there was no reason for them not to

return after the barbarians had passed. Despite some visible scars from the invasion, which invited succeeding generations '2 Smith, Sir Henry Wotton, 2:256.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

to credit the .legends, Aquileia remained the metropolis of

the region, and the rise of Venice had to wait for later developments." Legends, unlike history, can not tolerate ignorance, and so legend-makers invented whatever details seemed necessary to command belief. A myth was commonly dressed with many “facts” —names, dates, descriptions, numbers killed in battle, motives, words spoken—so as to confound refutation. In the

Middle Ages this craving for detail often took the form of providing the exact time and place for the foundation of a city. Jerusalem made its beginning 366 years after the flood, 2,023 after creation, and 1,941 before Christ; in Naples the first stone was placed on stone 2,804 years after the creation, 20 after the fall of Troy, and 408 before the founding of Rome.'* The Venetians likewise sought a precise date for the inception of their

city, and an auspicious one at that. To this purpose another legend arose, which in many ways contradicted the Attila myth. The standard version of this second legend about the movement from the terraferma to the lagoon is found in the chronicle of a Paduan doctor, Jacopo Dondi, who probably wrote between 1328 and 1339. Dondi recounts that at about noon on March 25, 421, a group of Paduans founded a city at Rivum

altum in the Venetian lagoon and designated three notables with the title of consul to rule it.!° For the date of March 25, Dondi relied on the Venetian ceremonial practice, which went back to possibly the eleventh century, of marking the beginning of the year on the day of the Annunciation.’® Dondi’s version of the legend caused controversy, however, because it appeared to offer primacy to Padua, after 1405 a subject city of Venice; 'S Cessi, Le origini del ducato veneziano, pp. 15-16. 4 Lanzoni, Genesi delle leggende storiche, pp. 23, 25-33. 5 Jacopo Dondi, Liber partium consilii magnifice comunitatis Padue, part of

the Liber Tabularum or the Liber A., fol. 165v in the Archivio Civile of the Museo Civico, Padua. In the published edition by Vittorio Lazzarini (see Bibliography, “Primary Sources,” s.v. Dondi), note especially pp. 1264-65. The portion regarding the foundation of Venice is also published in Roberto Cessi, ed., Documenti relativi alla storia di Venezia anteriori al mille, 1:1-2. Also see Ezio Franceschini, “La cronachetta di Maestro Jacopo Dondi,” especially p. 970.

6 Antonio Niero, “I santi patroni,” p. 79.

|AUSPICIOUS 7 1 BEGINNINGS | but the date of March 25 proved too auspicious for the Venetians to abandon, and instead they tended to edit out references to Padua. The date of March 25, 421, was more or less official in Venetian historiography; it appears in the works of Martin da Canal (who preceded Dondi), Andrea Dandolo, Bernardo Giustiniani, Marin Sanuto, Marc Antonio Sabellico, and Francesco Sansovino.??

March 25, of course, was charged with ritual significance. As / the first month of the Roman year, March was associated in the time of Ovid (Fasti 3.11.78) with the legends of the founding of Rome and with the springtime renewal of nature.'® Christianity further enriched the connection between fertility and the month of March by celebrating the Annunciation, the moment at which Christ's spirit entered Mary's womb and became incarnate, on the day of the Vernal Equinox on the Julian calendar,

March 25. Thus, in Venice the founding day of the city was

mystically conjoined with the founding of Rome, the beginning _ | of the Christian era, the annual rebirth of nature, and the first

day of the calendar year.'? Venetians were completely aware of | the mystical significance of this date, which Sabellico detailed.

Some say that where the church of Saint Mark now stands

was the starting point for the building [of Venice], and nearly all agree that the beginning was on the twentyfifth of March. Whatever the case, if we would just con-

sider some of the excellent works which have been per- | ‘7 Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 6; Niero, “I santi patroni,” p. 79; Francesco Sansovino, Venetia citta nobilissima et singolare, fols. 342v—43v. The date March 25, 421, also appears in the anonymous pamphlet Feste di palazzo et giorni ne’quali sua serenita esce di quello, under the heading “Marzo,” in

MCV, Op. P.D. 71. The pamphlet can be dated from internal evidence as between 1656 and 1727. '® Also see Plutarch, Romulus, pp. 3ff., and W. Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic, pp. 33—65. Plutarch offered the theory that Rome was founded in April. '? Until 1797 Venetians used three different systems of dating: notaries used March 25 as the beginning of the year; public acts and official documents were dated from March 1; documents destined for circulation outside the Venetian

dominions and nearly all private records after circa 1520 were dated from : January 1. A. Cappelli, Cronologia, cronografia e calendario perpetuo dal prin- , cipio dell’era cristiana ai giorni nostri, p. 16.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

| formed on that day, there will be no doubt that [there was] nothing established on that day which is not great and marvelous, [for as] the sacred letters affirm for the perpet-

ual glory of mankind, on that same day the omnipotent God formed our first ancestor. Likewise, [on that day,] the son of God was conceived in the womb of the Virgin.”°

Francesco Sansovino avowed as well that this providential founding meant that the Venetians had inherited the rights of ancient Rome. The Annunciation, moveover, became such a favorite Venetian religious and political theme that it appeared in relief on the facade of the basilica of San Marco, and it joined

Saint Mark and Saint Theodore at the base of the Rialto

| Bridge.*! In comparison to the Attila myth, the narrative of the beginning of Venice on March 25 became the more powerful, influential, and popular, not only because of its greater intrinsic symbolism, but also because it was one of the two founding legends incorporated into official ceremony. The Annunciation

Day procession and high mass in San Marco permanently bound the destiny of Venice to the veiled will of God, the harmony of nature, and the imperial authority of Rome.” In addition to the legends of noble ancestors and of the timely founding of the city, a few sparse accounts of early Venetian life

encouraged Renaissance Venetians to idealize their simple, pure | beginnings in much the same way that Protestant reformers imagined the perfection of the primitive Church. The sense of 20 “Dicono alcuni, che dove e hora la chiesa di san Marco fu il principio di tanta fabbrica, & tutti quasi si accordano, che tale principio fosse a xxv. di Marzo. Per laqual cosa, se noi volemo considerare alcune opere eccellenti in cotal giorno essere state fatte, non sara dubbio a creder che niuna cosa in quel giorno ha principio, laqual non sia grande & maravigliosa, & é perpetua gloria delle cose humane le sacre lettere affermano in quel medesimo giorno l’omnipotenti Dio haver formato il nostro primo parente. Similmente che esso figliuol d’Iddio fu nel ventre della Vergine conceputo.” Sabellico, Le | historie vinitiane, fol. 3v. Cf. Labalme, Bernardo Giustiniani, p. 267. *! Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fols. 342v—43v; Niero, “I santi patroni,” pp. 79-80; Otto Demus, The Church of San Marco in Venice, pp. 126-35. 22 Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fols. 342v—43v; Giustina Renier Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 1:5—64. Michiel associated the March 25 celebra-

tion with the Venetian struggle with Pepin in the early ninth century. This connection was not made in the sixteenth century.

73

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS continuity in Venetian history was particularly profound, and sixteenth-century Venetians saw in their city’s beginnings auguries of their own political truths.”* In the description of the

lagoon by Cassiodorus (537-38) the humanist historians dis- , covered a vision of a virtuous primitive life: small wooden boats plied the waters of a vast, nearly deserted lagoon, whose inhab-

itants existed by hunting, fishing, and bartering salt. Cassiodorus said that the line of islands enclosing the lagoon from the sea created a “permanent tranquil security.””* Venice's legend-

ary, independence at its birth from both the Empire and the Roman Church, added to its security and peacefulness, perpetuated the notion of Venetian liberty. In the sixteenth century Gasparo Contarini contrasted the founding of Venice, accomplished through the collective pursuit of “onore,” “chiarezza,” and “virtu” by its settlers, with the founding of Athens, Lacedaemon, and Rome by a single hero-legislator. Venice's independent foundation was thus the source of its stability.*° Although in his Second Treatise of Government (par. 102, Il. 3— 6) John Locke differed from Contarini in his view of the origin

of Rome, Locke nevertheless emphasized the importance of a foundation in freedom: “. . . who will not allow that the beginning of Rome and Venice were by the uniting together of several Men free and independent one of another, amongst whom there was no natural Superiority or Subjection.” By the Renaissance,

when the historical awareness of Venetians was most keen, the ,

.mythical origins of Venice had a profound influence on the

development of a republican political ideology. | Modern historians, however, have rejected much of this idealized picture of early Venice. In the view of Roberto Cessi, the search for the date and circumstances of Venice’s foundation and independence is wrongheaded, since Venetian autonomy was not simply a local development but part of the long disso-

lution of the Byzantine Empire. He argues that the supposed autonomy recorded by Cassiodorus was an illusion and that the

3 Cf. the comments by Fasoli, “Comune veneciarum,” p. 474. , , 24M. A. Cassiodorii, Epistulae variae, 1:12, no. 24, reprinted in Documenti anteriori al mille, pp. 2—4. Cf. Gian Piero Bognetti, “Natura, politica e religioni nelle origini di Venezia,” p. 3. 25 Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment, pp. 322-23.

og

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS major migrations to the lagoon occurred not in the fifth but in

the sixth and seventh centuries, as a result of the Lombard ,

conquest of the Friuli, Padua, Treviso, and Vicenza. Furthermore, he rejects the favorite claim of Venetians—that Roman nobles figured in the migration to Venice—by demonstrating that the early Venetians, unlike the Romans, conceived of nobility as a title gained only by holding political office, not as a social distinction. In fact, the first proposals to limit by law those who could be elected to office came as late as 1286.”° Gradual independence came to Venice in the eighth century,

when Constantinople accepted the first duces elected by local

will alone. In 810 the political center of the lagoon was trans- | ferred to its present site at Rialto, and by 840 the Carolingian emperors had recognized the autonomy of the ducato. In the

tenth century Rialto consolidated its administrative authority | over the other lagoon towns, and by the eleventh Venice had _ begun its physical expansion as a city, its commercial adventures to the Levant, and its transformation of the ducato into a commune.*’ Venice, well on its way to becoming the Most Serene Republic, needed only a device by which it might maintain the institutional and procedural continuity necessary for a

stable, peaceful mercantile environment. That device became

the civic liturgy, an annual succession of feast days and ceremonial occasions conducted by the patrician rulers of Venice.

THE FESTIVE CALENDAR

Machiavelli observed that “Men in general make judgments more by appearances than by reality, for sight alone belongs to everyone, but understanding to few. Everyone sees what you appear to be, few know what you are, and those few do not dare to contradict the opinion of the many who have the majesty of

125-27. ,

the state to defend them; and in the actions of all men, and most of all of princes, from whom there is no appeal, one must 26 Cessi, Le origini del ducato veneziano, pp. 18—32, 323-39.

27 Fasoli, “Comune veneciarum,” pp. 477-85, 490-91; Carlo Guido Mor, “Aspetti della vita costituzionale veneziana fino alla fine del x secolo,” pp.

75 | AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS consider the end result.”** It is dangerous for the prince to be weak, but worse to look so. One way Machiavelli suggested that

the prince might strengthen his own public presence was to | | follow the Roman formula of providing circenses for the plebi- | ans: “He should ..., at appropriate times of the year, keep the people occupied with festivals and shows.””° In the strict observance of the festive church calendar and in the elaboration and enrichment of certain feasts for the purposes of state, the prince best obeyed Machiavelli's dictum. The prince was, in effect, enjoined to imitate a truth that perceptive priests, if not dogmatic theologians, had long understood; as E. P. Thompson

has put it, “... to the degree that the ritual calendar year chimes in with the agrarian calendar, the authority of the Church is strengthened.”®° The state likewise enhanced its au-

thority when it could insinuate its own special rites into the agrarian calendar. Yet such a civic liturgy was not just a calculated political gesture but also a communal celebration of civic

values and a dramatic revue of society in all its constituent | parts. In this sense public spectacles were more than a popular

diversion: like the chorus in a Greek play, the civic liturgy commented on the roles of the actors in community life. On the basis of this commentary, Machiavelli averred, men understand and judge the state. Calendrical rites, which anthropologists tend to distinguish

from the life-crisis rites that define the biological or status _transitions of an individual, nearly always embrace large groups

or whole societies that must adapt to seasonal changes. Performed at well-delineated times in the agricultural year, calendrical rites ease the transition from scarcity to plenty, as at harvest feasts, or from plenty to scarcity, when winter hard28 “FE li uomini in universali iudicano pit alli occhi che alle mani; perché tocca a vedere a ognuno, a sentire a pochi. Ognuno vede quello che tu pari, pochi sentono quello che tu se’; e quelli pochi non ardiscano opporsi alla opinione di molti, che abbino la maesta dello stato che gli defenda; e nelle azioni di tutti gli uomini, e massime de’ principi, dove non é iudizio a chi reclamare, si guarda al fine.” I] Principe 18.5. 9 “Debbe, oltre a questo, ne’ tempi convenienti dell’anno, tenere occupati e populi con le feste e spettaculi.” I] Principe 21.7. °° Thompson, “Anthropology and Historical Context,” p. 51.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

ships are magically anticipated.*! Calendrical rites are thus buffers against the potential of chaos; with these rites the superior claims of group over individual interests are emphasized, and the cohesiveness of society is, in theory, reinforced. If lifecrisis rites define the idiosyncratic, the personal, and the biological, then in contrast calendrical rites proclaim the communal, the universal, and the eternal. All rituals help individuals and societies confront potentially confounding change, since a ritual can recognize, define, explain, and thus control change.

In the European historical context, as we have noted, there were exceptions to this anthropological model; in Venice, how-

ever, there was a remarkable consistency in the ways public rituals supported and strengthened communal stability.

The Venetians, of course, adopted in outline the liturgical calendar of Christianity, which flowered from the grafting of

the pre-agrarian lunar calendar of the Hebrews to the solar calendar of the Romans. The results of this grafting can be seen

in the two distinct cycles of the Christian liturgy: the Easter cycle of movable feasts, derived from the lunar dating of the Hebrew Passover; and the Nativity cycle of fixed feasts, reckoned from the dating of Christ’ birth on the twenty-fifth day of the tenth month of the Julian solar year.*” The ritual commemoration of the life of Christ in the liturgy kept time with

the passing of the seasons, and thus the mission of Christ, relived each year in the Church’s feasts, became as much a part of the universal order as the waning and waxing of the moon or the apparent movements of the planets. Through ritual, Christianity became as natural as Nature itself. Other than using the dating conventions of Roman Christianity and celebrating the major feasts at the same time as other _

Western Christians, the Venetian calendar was a purely local | creation owing little even to Byzantium for its distinctive character. The Venetians neither directly copied rites nor at first competed with Constantinople in imperial splendor; Byzantine °? Turner, The Ritual Process, pp. 168— 69.

®? The Catholic Encyclopedia, s.v. “Calendar”; F. L. Cross, ed., The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, s.v. “Calendar,” “Ascension,” “Epiphany,” “Advent,” “Candlemas,” “Pentecost,” and “Whitsunday.” E. O. James, Seasonal Feasts and Festivals.

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traditions may have governed the taste and style of early Vene- : tian ceremonies without determining the details of individual rites, but by the fourteenth century local influences were entirely dominant.** Venice had its own particular liturgy called

the patriarchino, adopted from the patriarchate of Grado, which had in turn taken it from Aquileia. Although its local variations made it a liturgy like no other, the patriarchino’s greatest debt was to the Gregorian calendar, for it had no particular affinities to the calendar of Alexandria or Constantinople. The offices of the patriarchino were usually longer than in othér rites, the doge himself could give a benedictio in it, and changes in the rite normally came at the behest of the doges, who kept an absolute authority over the liturgy of San Marco. The patriarchino, theretore, was especially subject to political influences. Until the fifteenth century the rite was practiced

throughout Venice, but in 1456 a papal brief, requested by Patriarch Maffeo Contarini, abolished it everywhere except in San Marco; so the patriarchino became the exclusive liturgy of the doge and Signoria—a liturgy of state.** Just as the Christian ceremonies relived the history of Christ, the Church, and the saints, the Venetian liturgy re-enacted the history of Venice, so that secular history and legend became as sacred as the biblical mysteries. The liturgy sanctified the past and nurtured belief in the moral order of the res publica: what

was peculiarly Venetian was associated with what was univer- | sally Christian or eternally natural, thus blending patriotism ‘and faith. The dates of the annual celebrations in Venice corresponded either to feast days on the Roman calendar of saints’ days or to

events in Venetian history, and they fell into four distinct |

groups: those which honored a saint, Saint Mark in particular; those which recalled the visit to Venice of Pope Alexander III in 1177 and the gifts with which he supposedly honored the doge; those which marked important events in Venetian history, such

as the victory at Lepanto; and those which illustrated the rights, obligations, and limitations of the doges and other of°° Fasoli, “Liturgia e cerimoniale ducale,” pp. 275-76, 292—93. 34 Antonio Pasini, “Rito antico e cerimoniale della basilica.” The details of the liturgy can be found in BMV, MS Latin 11, 172 (2276).

78

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS fice-holders. From the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries, moreover, Venetian annual celebrations became more complex and more frequent; the conception of civic time came increasingly to rely on ritual performances.

Pax Trp! MaRcE EVANGELISTA Meus

The cult of Saint Mark was the nucleus of Venetian civic con- | sciousness. In the civic liturgy Saint Mark personified the Venetian polity, and his cult as expressed in legend and ceremony recorded and preserved for the collective memory dramatic precedents in the history of the community. Silvio Tramontin has argued, for example, that the four major Venetian legends about Saint Mark were allegories for political events, constitutional principles, or stages in the historical development 35 In contrast to Venice, the Florentines associated all the days save one on their republican festive calendar with the intercession of a saint. Richard C. Trexler, “Ritual Behavior in Renaissance Florence,” p. 134. The earliest list of Venetian feast days is Kalendarium Venetum saeculi XI, See Silvio Tramontin, “Il ‘Kalendarium’ veneziano.” In the thirteenth century Martin da Canal found twelve annual festivals worthy of discussion. Les estoires de Venise, pp. 247-63. By the end of the fifteenth century Marin Sanuto recognized twenty important days. Le vite dei dogi, pp. 86-91. The official ceremonial book of the Collegio lists sixteen annual events that required the participation of the doge and Signoria during the sixteenth century and also shows that the number of events varied greatly from year to year. ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 11r—v. Other lists, which include many of the locally celebrated saints’ days, name twenty-nine, sixty-nine, and seventy-eight annual days of ceremonial importance. See, respectively, BMV, MS Latin In, 172 (2276), fol. 54r—

v; MCV, Cod. Cicogna 2992/1 28, fols. Ir—5v; and MCV, MS Dona delle

Rose 132/6, fols. 139r—143v. Comparing a number of sources, I have found , at least eighty-six different days that, by the end of the sixteenth century, had some ceremonial importance for the republic. Sansovino distinguished

, between the ten holidays requiring a full procession comprised of the doge, Signoria, and the display of the ducal symbols and the four holidays conducted without the symbols and musicians. Venetia, 1604, fols. 330v, 243v— 45v. Seven of these fourteen days also required the participation of the Scuole Grandi, clerical congregations, and orders of regulars, and it was on these occasions that tableaux vivants and musical performances were likely to be appropriate. BMV, MS Latin Il, 172 (2276), fol. 55v. Cf. Rosand, “Music in the Myth of Venice,” p. 516.

79

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS of the res publica veneta.*® The Evangelist’s cult was perhaps the most important element contributing to the continuity in Venetian mythology, and the Venetian liturgy intensified the moral and mystical resonance of the cult.

| A Venetian legend claimed that Saint Mark stopped at the lagoon while evangelizing in Italy and that this visit forged an

inseparable bond between Saint and city. The definitive account appeared in Doge Andrea Dandolo’s fourteenth-century Chronicon venetum.*" Saint Peter sent Mark and a companion, Hermagoras, to proselytize Aquileia; surprised by a squall on their

return to Rome, Mark and his companions sought shelter in the placid lagoon where the major rivers of the Veneto found an outlet to the sea. Their boat came to rest at a small island (the very one upon which the city of Rialto would later be established), where Mark debarked to spend the night. In a dream an angel came to the frightened Evangelist and pro-

claimed, “Pax tibi, Marce. Hic requiescet corpus tuum.” The , angel reassured Mark that he still had much to accomplish for Christ and described to him the glorious city that refugees would someday build on the spot where he lay, the honor they

| would render to his relics, and the many gifts God would grant them through Mark’s intercession. Later writers revised the story to add that the future inhabitants of the desolate isle would be a superior breed of men, ever dedicated to virtu and pieta; or, as Sansovino described Saint Mark’s influence, “.. . under his custody the Empire of this people must grow and forever survive for the good of mankind.”*®

“© Silvio Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda nei racconti marciani veneti.” There | is a bibliography of studies regarding Saint Mark in Venice on p. 35. Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, pp. 8— 24; Silvio Tramontin, “Breve storia dell’agiografia veneziana.”

°7 The account that follows has been taken from Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” pp. 45—46. The Andrea Dandolo text is edited by E. Pastorello in Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, 2d. Bologna, 1938, 12:10. Other versions include the “Cronaca di Marco,” BMV, MS Italiano x1, 124 (6802), fol. 5v. and

- Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, pp. 506-7. :

38.“ | . sotto la sua custodia, l’Imperio di questa natione dovesse crescere, & mantenersi perpetuo per salute del genere humano.” Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, p. 505. Cf. Giovanni Stringa, Vita di S. Marco evangelista, protettore invitissimo della serenissima republica di Venetia, con la traslatione, & apparitione del sacro suo corpo; fatta nella nobilissima chiesa, al nome suo dedicata, pp. 23-24.

80

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS This fable is without historical foundation. There is no contemporary of biblical evidence of an evangelical visit by Saint

Mark to Aquileia or to anywhere in Venetia, nor did his cult | appear in the region until long after his death. The story seems to have been a thirteenth-century fabrication designed to jus-

tify the theft of Saint Mark’s relics by claiming the transfer pre-ordained.*? The early Christian churches in the area, none of which date from before the mid-third century, were devoted -

to other saints, and, as late as the sixth century, Venantius

Fortunatus reported that Saint Fortunatus was the greatest |

treasure of Aquileia, just as Saint Mark was the glory of Egypt.

Saint Hermagorus, whose cult was closely linked to that of Saint Mark, did not appear in the Aquileian calendar until the fifth century or become the city’s patron until the eleventh century. The first mention of Saint Mark as founder and a patron of the Christian church in Aquileia is in the Lombard chronicle of Paul the Deacon (783—86).*° But at the end of the

eighth century, Paulinus, the patriarch of Aquileia, wrote of

Saint Mark as the founder of the diocese, a claim that gave the | patriarch immense prestige and that supported Aquileian pretensions to autonomy from Rome and, at the Synod of Mantua

in 827, to primacy over the rival patriarchical seat at Grado. By | the ninth century, then, Saint Mark was well established in the region as a symbol of local privilege. From Aquileia the cult migrated to Grado, the “New Aquileia,” and eventually, after the acquisition of the Saint’s remains, to Venice. Venetians claimed that the transfer, or translatio, of Mark’s

body from Alexandria to Venice, in 827 or 828, secured the , Saint's patronage. According to the legend, ten Venetian ships on a voyage to the East were blown off course and forced to seek refuge from a storm in the Arab-controlled port of Alexandria. The sources emphasize that the visit was involuntary, 38 Cf. the comments on the justification of relic thefts by Patrick J. Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 140-42.

, *° Paul the Deacon wrote of Saint Mark’s evangelical trip to Aquileia: “Marcum vero qui praecipuus inter eius discipulos habebatur, Aquileiam destinavit, quibus cum Hermagoram suum comitem Marcus praefecisset, ad beatum Petrum reversus, ab eo nihilominus Alexandriam missus est.” Quoted by Silvio

Tramontin, “San Marco,” p. 48. ,

81

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS because there was an imperial decree in effect at the time that prohibited Christians from trading with Saracens. Among the merchants who debarked in Alexandria were two tribunes, Buono da Malamocco and Rustico da Torcello, who became friendly with a monk named Staurizio and a priest called Theodore, both of whom were from the Christian church that har- bored the remains of Saint Mark.*! Fearing that the Moslems might destroy the Christian shrines, Theodore proposed that the two Venetians rescue the body from danger, and in reply Buono and Rustico recalled the story of Mark’s conversion of

Aquileia and Venetia, argued that “hence we are his eldest sons,” and declared Venice the Evangelist’s proper home.*” With

the promise of a handsome reward from the doge, Theodore and Staurizio helped the Venetians smuggle the body past the Arab customs inspectors by covering it with pork, whose very sight disgusted the Moslems. They replaced Mark's body with

another clad in the Saint's vestments. On the voyage home | Saint Mark saved the ship from running aground while the

| crew slept, and he defended the ship's company from an attack of demons; these miracles verified the authenticity of the relics now in Venetian possession. *? Expecting punishment for having visited an Arab country, Buono and Rustico sent word ahead from Istria that they would give the body to Doge Giustiniano Particiaco in exchange for a pardon, but the doge was so over-

joyed at the news about the relics that he not only pardoned but richly rewarded the two pious merchants. With a majestic procession the religious and secular authorities received the *1 This account of the translatio of Saint Mark is based primarily on Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” pp. 46-48; Cf. Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 1:63—83, and Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 107—15, for an account based

on the earliest sources. Martin da Canal differs in several details from this synopsis. Les estoires de Venise, pp. 16-20. A sixteenth-century version that conforms to the account given here is by Giorgio Dolfin, “Cronica di Venezia dall’origine sua fino all’anno 1458,” BMV, MS Italiano vi, 794 (8503), fols.

14. |

47r—A8r.

*? In other accounts the Venetians first proposed the removal of Saint Mark’s body. Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 18, and Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 113*8 For an account of the miracles see Canal, Les estoires de Venise, pp. 18— 20, and Dolfin, “Cronica,” BMV, MS Italiano vil, 794 (8503), fols. 47v— 48r.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS | body, which affirmed its holiness by performing several miracles in the Ducal Palace. Soon Saint Mark completely displaced all other saints as Venice's palladium.

Whether or not the body of Saint Mark or some other relic

was actually transferred to Venice in 827 or 828 is incidental to | the history of the legend, but it is an issue that still engages some historians. Silvio Tramontin, the most prominent scholarly advocate of the veracity of the translatio, cites two favorable bits of evidence: a Frankish monk, Bernard, reported after a late ninth-century pilgrimage to the Holy Land that the body of Saint Mark, no longer in Egypt, had been taken to Venice; and a provision in Doge Giustiniano Particiaco’s will ordered that a basilica be built in honor of Mark.** The earliest recounting of the transfer story itself, however, is in a tenth-century codex, and Antonio Niero notes that an Egyptian tradition has the Evangelist’s head still in Alexandria in the thirteenth century.* The eyewitness account of the opening of Saint Mark’s tomb in 1809 is likewise inconclusive: although the investigators did find a pulverized skeleton, the other objects placed in the grave dated from the eleventh century.*® As with many celebrated relics, the evidence is so contradictory that verification is impossible and, moreover, not necessarily important for modern historiography. Far more important are the uses of the legend. The translatio supposedly occurred within a generation of Pepin’s attempt in 810 to conquer Venice by sacking Malamocco, which was then the capital, and the subsequent removal of the ducal government to Rialto. One scholar has suggested that the translatio was a political invention of Doge Giustiniano Particiaco; it ob-

scured the spiritual authority of Grado in order to force the patriarch to abandon his Frankish alliance and to move his seat #4 Tramontin, “San Marco,” pp. 54~56. The passage in Doge Particiaco’s will regarding the basilica reads, “Quidquid exinde remanserit de lapidibus et quidquid circa hanc [p]e[tram] iacet et de casa Theophilato de Torcello hedifficetur basilicha beati Marci evangeliste, sicut supra imperavimus.” Cessi, ed., Documenti anteriori al mille, p. 96.

*° On the tenth-century codex see Geary, Furta Sacra, p. 114; Antonio

Niero, “Reliquie e corpi di santi,” pp. 192—94. , *® Jacopo Filiasi, Memoria sopra il corpo di S. Marco, pp. 54—56.

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to the Realtine Islands, where the doge could better control him.*” Indeed, the translatio legend clearly accords the gift of Saint Mark’s body to Doge Particiaco rather than to a particular

church or prelate, a fact that forged the permanent spiritual union between the doges and the Saint and that made Mark's cult a political concern. In a similar interpretation, Patrick , Geary emphasizes that Doge Particiaco acquired the body as a conscious political challenge to the Franks, who at the Synod of Mantua had supported Aquileia’s patriarch over Grado’. In addition to countering Carolingian influence, the decision to re-

move the Evangelist Mark to Rialto had the secondary advan- | tage of reducing Byzantine dominance in the city by substituting the “Italian” Evangelist Mark for the Greek soldier Theodore as the personal patron of the doge.*® Nelson McCleary argues that

Particiaco’s primary purpose was to unify the Venetian towns and islands around a religious center that was directly under his

own tutelage, thus undermining the patriarchates of both Aquileia and Grado.*® Hans Conrad Peyer, in contrast, sees the

translatio as merely a local manifestation of a phenomenon

common to many of the small Italian states left as residue after | the breakdown of Byzantine domination. While he concedes | that the Particiaci doges probably used their possession of the | evangelical relics to gain spiritual sovereignty over Grado, Peyer

notes that in many of the formerly Byzantine cities dominion correlated with the possession of the mortal remains of a saint. protector who guarded the citizens from attack and who sanctioned communal independence.*® Any attempt to explain the exact motives or combination of motives behind the supposed

transfer is largely guesswork, but it seems probable that, whether or not Doge Particiaco actually planned the acquisition in advance, he was quick to recognize the tremendous political and spiritual potentialities of Saint Mark’s body. The translatio provided the Venetians with a highly placed intercessor and, at } 47 See Tramontin’s comments on the thesis of Gfrorer. “San Marco,” p. 56. 48 Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 108-11. *9 Nelson McCleary, “Note storiche ed archeologiche sul testo della ‘Translatio Sancti Marci,’ ” p. 224. °° Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, pp. 9-11. Cf. Tramontin, “San Marco,” p. 56.

84

, AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS | the same time, declared the independence of Venice; as Gina Fasoli put it, the “myth of Venice” was born on the very day Doge Particiaco accepted the body.°’ In the eleventh century the Venetian liturgical calendar added a commemorative mass to be sung in San Marco on January 31, and thus the translatio story became a permanent fixture in the civic ritual of Venice.” As possessors of the Evangelists body, the Venetian duces

modeled their relationship to Mark on that of the popes’ to Saint Peter. Just as the popes had inherited the authority of | Peter, so had the Venetians inherited that of Mark. The popes were autonomous; therefore so should be the Venetian state. In the cult of Saint Mark religious and civic values became inseparable; the idea that Venice had a divine destiny culminated in the thirteenth-century legend of the angelic prophecy given to Mark while he rested at the Rialto.®* In political thought the patronage of Saint Mark created the basis for a theory, to use the terminology coined by Walter Ullmann, of a descending political. authority in which the potestas granted by God was transferred through Mark to the doge.™* In the Renaissance the rituals of Saint Mark’s feast day, April

25, perpetuated both the mystical bond between Saint Mark and the doge and the conception of descending authority. On the eve of Saint Mark’s Day a vespers procession of the doge, high magistrates, musicians, and bearers of the ducal symbols

marched from the Ducal Palace to San Marco, where at the singing of the Magnificat the doge lighted a white candle on the

high altar in honor of the Evangelist. This act renewed the spiritual bond between the Saint and the city and reiterated the doges’ central role in the Saint's cult.°> Commentators noted that in 1177 Pope Alexander III gave the white candle to the >" Fasoli, “Nascita di un mito.”

, °2 Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 20; Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 89; Tramontin, “San Marco,” p. 59. °3 Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” pp. 36-44, 53-54; idem, “San Marco,” pp. 47-52; Niero, “I santi patroni,” pp. 82—83; Fasoli, “Nascita di un mito,” pp. 451-52; McCleary, “Translatio Sancti Marci,” pp. 224-31. °4 Walter Ullman, Principles of Government and Politics in the Middle Ages.

°° Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, p. 507; Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 90; ASV, , Coilegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 8v; BMV, MS Latin ml, 172 (2276), fol. 53r.

85

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS | doge, thus implying that the popes had recognized the doges’ special relationship with the Saint. The ceremony, however, was not exclusively ducal. The law required several of the guilds —

along with the Scuole Grandi, the most important non-noble organizations—to join the procession and to offer candles, as had the doge, for the Evangelist. The gifts not only revealed

| the broad social base of devotion to Saint Mark but also signified the “feudal” ties of the guilds to the doge: in a seventeenth-

century description of the ceremony Nicolo Doglioni named , four guilds that were obliged “to offer some wax candles signifying a recognition of vassalage.”°® The annual homage to Saint Mark thereby provided an additional dramatic opportunity for

| statecraft: on a public and sanctified stage the doge ritually enacted his lordship over the plebian institutions of Venice. The same principle of making political relationships explicit

governed the ceremonies at the high mass sung in honor of Mark on the following day. For example, the doge and papal

nuncio confessed simultaneously to the officiating priest in order to avoid the quarrels over precedence that Venetian pre- i tensions to administrative independence from the Papacy were , bound to provoke. And after the services, while they were passing in review before the dignitaries, Scuole Grandi members gave specially decorated candles to the doge, his wife, the nuncio, the foreign ambassadors, the ducal counselors, and the entire assembled secular and religious hierarchy down to sena_ tors, bishops, and abbots.*” In this procession the confraternities also displayed their most prized relics, including the mirac-

ulous cross of the Scuola di San Giovanni Evangelista, a thorn 56 “Ad offerire alcuni Torci di cera come senso per ricognitione di Vasalaggio... .” Nicold Doglioni, Le cose notabili et maravigliose della citta di Venetia,

p. 263. The four guilds were the pittori, fabri, pellizzari, and “quei che fan | panni di setta.” One of the capitoli of the Mariegola (incorporation regulations and statutes) for the painters’ guild required the members to offer two candles, each worth five lire, every year on the eve of Saint Mark’s Day. MCV, MS P.D. 606c/i, fol. 9. Also see Sanuto, I diarii, 20:139. °? Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, pp. 507—8. The procession also included guildsmen, but they did not give candles on this occasion. The guilds that participated varied considerably from year to year, but thesartori were usually present. Sanuto, I diarii, 30:169, 41:219, 44:552; Doglioni, Le cose notabili, p. 263.

86

| AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS from the crown of Christ, a finger of Saint Roch, and the episcopal ring of Saint Mark.** As a legal obligation, the distribution of candles signified—if one can make an inference from Doglioni’s comments about the guildsmen’s gifts of candles—

the similar ties of “vassalage” of these sodalities to the nobility | and, of course, the Scuole Grande members’ reverence toward Saint Mark.*? Feudal terminology and ritual homage combined

in this instance to define the social relationship between the subordinate classes and the nobility, and the definition was made in a hallowed context that could imply only a divine sanction of the status quo.

Just as the translatio represented in allegory the political unification of the lagoon under the doges and the initial stages of Venetian independence from Byzantium, the legend of the

apparition or inventio of Saint Mark was an allegory of the consummation of Venetian political autonomy.®° The church

built by the Particiaci doges to house Saint Mark’s body burned | in 976 during a revolt against Doge Pietro IV Candiano. Because the doges had feared thieves, only a few trusted officials knew the precise location of the Evangelist’s relics; after the fire

the spot was altogether forgotten. Despite numerous searches beneath the new church built on the same site by Doge Domenico Contarini (1043-71), the body remained lost until 1094, when, as a final resort, Doge Vitale Falier ordered the bishop to declare a communal fast lasting for three days and ending with

a solemn procession on the fourth day, June 25.°' The fervent _ devotion of the populace during the procession was said to have ~ evoked a miracle, for during the high mass a portion of a col-

umn made from pieces taken from the old basilica gradually moved, revealing the body of Saint Mark, which filled the air

8 Sanuto, I diarii, 30:169. , °° The Scuole spent a total of 209% lire for wax for Saint Mark’s Day,

according to the list in BMV, MS Latin 11, 172 (2276), fol. 78v. The amount

| spent for the candles given to different officials varied considerably. °° The account of the inventio of Saint Mark that follows is based primarily on Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” p. 55-57. An early account of the legend is in Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 218.

°! Michiel, who presents a slightly different version of this legend, claims that the search was prompted by a pilgrimage made to the basilica by Emperor Henry V. Le origine delle feste veneziane, 3:128—46.

87

, AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS with a sweet odor.™ The body was left on public dispiay for the edification of the faithful until a crypt was ready for it and until the new basilica was consecrated on October 8, which also became an annual feast day.®? Although the full legend and the

annual holiday were creations of the second half of the thirteenth century, Tramontin has argued that the story may be an embellishment of an actual event. During the building of a new basilica, the body (if it had not been lost in the fire) would have been exhumed from the old tomb and probably put on display

until the new crypt was built.°* Added to the inventio story in : | the fourteenth century was the detail of Saint Mark extending his arm out from the column, and in the sixteenth-century

versions a pastoral gold ring appeared on the protruding hand.® , The cult of Saint Mark required such an apparition legend, if for no other reason, in order to imitate the pattern that medi-

eval hagiographers had established for important saints’ after- : lives: a martyrdom (passio), a transferral (translatio), and a : rediscovery of relics (inventio).®° For the Venetians the miraculous rediscovery of Saint Mark’s body signified not only the re-establishment of the material and magical bonding between Saint and city but also the efficacy of the communal procession itself as a ritual act, for it was the penetential procession that had brought about the saintly miracle. In addition, the apparition allegorized the culmination of the Venetian struggle for independence from Byzantium by re-asserting Saint Mark as a - symbolic alternative to the Byzantine protector-saints. The date of the apparition is important, since the Venetians’ desire to rise above the Byzantine heritage may have been stimulated by the Byzantine emperor's desperate circumstances after his defeat at the hands of the Seljuk Turks at Manzikert in 1071, the same circumstances that eventually led Pope Urban II to call for S? Cf. Tramontin, “San Marco,” p. 57. 63 Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 89. 6 Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” p. 57. On the dating of the legend and of the feast see G. Monticolo, “L’apparitio Sancti Marci ed i suoi manoscritti,” pp. 112—30; McCleary, “Translatio Sancti Marci,” p. 232; Demus, The Church of San Marco, p. 13, n. 41.

85 Monticolo, “L’apparitio Sancti Marci,” pp. 128~30. | _ °° Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” p. 57.

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the First Crusade in 1095. Thereafter, the cult of Saint Mark became a fundament of the Venetian colonial system and was used as part of a conscious imperial policy: in 1211 Doge Pietro

Ziani demanded that the Cretans sing lauds to the Venetian doge each year on Christmas, Easter, Saint Titus’s Day (the Cretan apostle and patron), and Saint Mark’s Day. The forced

inclusion of Saint Mark’s Day in the Cretan liturgical calendar constituted, according to Ernst Kantorowicz, the imposition of the Venetians’ local “diety” upon a conquered people. ®’

The June 25 ceremonies dedicated to the inventio paralleled those of Saint Mark's Day, April 25, except that on this occasion the clerical congregations and the religious orders joined the Scuole Grandi in paying the homage of candles to the doge and

other magistrates. In describing this rite no commentator ap- | plied the feudal terms used to interpret the April 25 gift of candles, but it is clear that the ceremony was an act of submission to the doge on the part of the ecclesiastical establishment

and signified the spiritual dominion of the secular authority. As on Saint Mark’s Day the procession was an occasion for the public display of the relics associated with Saint Mark, includ-

ing a book said to be written in the Saint's own hand and his gold bishop’s ring, proudly carried in a sumptuous tabernacle by the members of the Scuola Grande di San Marco. The origin of the episcopal ring of Mark was the subject of two mutually contradictory tales that illustrate ways in which the essentially civic and political cult of Mark inspired the pious imagination of Venetians. The older story was the more famous and seemingly the one preferred in official circles. On February 25, 1341, during a fierce winter storm, a stranger approached

an old fisherman who was trying to save his boat and gear from | damage. Ignoring the gaffer’s fearful protests, the stranger ordered him to row to the island of San Giorgio (see map) where boarded a second stranger, who commanded the boatman to

row even farther—to San Nicolo on the island of the Lido. There a third mysterious stranger appeared and directed the °7 Kantorowicz, Laudes Regiae, p. 154. 88 Sanuto, I diarii, 18:296, 24:405—6, 58:372; Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, p. 515; Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 3:136—37.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS fisherman to row to the mouth of the lagoon, where the boatman and his three passengers spied a terrible ship of demons

who were causing the storm. The combined invocations of the | three strangers, now revealed as Saint Mark, Saint George, and Saint Nicholas, dispatched the demons, rendering the lagoon

again placid. The awed fisherman returned each saint to the spot where he had met him. When Saint Mark debarked, he gave his gold ring to the old man, instructing him to present it to the doge. The fisherman obeyed and received a pension from

the ,oge as a reward.® An obvious allegory of the threefold protection of the city by the Evangelist Mark, the soldier George, and the sailors’ helper Nicholas, the mildly suspenseful story confirmed the city’s saintly favor and the doges’ inheri-

tance of the ecclesiastical prerogatives of Mark. The conception ,

of descending political authority is somewhat confused in this legend since Saint Mark chose to bequeath his ring to the doge through an intermediary chosen from the people, who voluntarily turned it over to the doge, implying that his “episcopal” power was somehow contingent upon popular consent. In the fourteenth century the doge’s coronation ceremony still echoed this same idea of communal consent by requiring that a newly

elected doge be presented to the assembled populace for its approval. The confusion between descending and ascending lines of authority, or more accurately the blending of them, is typical of the constitutional ideas embodied in Venetian ritual cand reflects the hodge-podge historical accumulation of sometimes contradictory precedents that one should expect ina city —

where no revolution or reform of sufficient magnitude ever cleared away overworn traditions.

The other legend of the gift of Saint Mark's ring was of sixteenth-century origin and never as popular as the fisherman story. According to Giovanni Stringa’s account of the apparition

of Saint Mark, when the body miraculously appeared in the , column and extended its hand the crowd noticed a gold ring on a finger of the Saint.”° Many in. the congregation desired the ring; the doge, bishop, and others tried to pull it off the hand, 6° Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” pp. 57-58. ® Stringa, Vita di S. Marco, pp. 85-89.

90 7 AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

but to no avail, since the Saint did not wish them to have it. Among those present was one Domenico Dolfin, a pious man extremely devoted to Saint Mark, who, wishing for the ring more than any of the others, prayed with such fervent devotion

that he fell ill. Seeing this, Saint Mark was convinced that | Dolfin deserved the ring above all others, and accordingly a voice from the column spoke to Domenico: “Take the ring, take

it; it is permitted that this nobleman pull the ring from the finger, and after it is off he will be the free and absolute posses-

sor and owner of it.””! Dolfin did so, and his family kept the ring until a Lorenzo Dolfin gave it to the Scuola Grande di San Marco, which thereafter carried it in the June 25 procession in memory of the apparition. Other than the ring’s reputation for healing the infirm, there is no contemporary evidence implying that the Dolfin ring was accorded any particular mystical or political significance.”* Like the ring given to the fisherman, this ring was a token of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, but there is no claim that the Dolfin family or the Scuola Grande di San Marco inherited any jurisdictional rights, as was the case when the fisherman gave the ring to the doge. It did not particularly bother the Venetians to have several rings in their mythology, and in fact a third legend (discussed in the next chapter) traced yet another ring, with which the doge married the sea, to a gift of Pope Alexander III. Each ring legend signified something different. Whereas the fisherman’ tale accorded the doge Saint Mark’s episcopal prerogatives and whereas the Alexander gift, as we shall see, offered a papal confirmation of the doge’s ecclesiastical jurisdication and Venice's imperial ambitions, the Dolfin story merely asserted the on-going intercession and miracle-working powers of Saint Mark and perhaps provided the Dolfin patriline with a family myth that distinguished it from others. Through their celebration in annual holidays, in mosaic representations on the walls and ceilings of San Marco, and un-

| doubtedly in oral tradition, the legends of Saint Mark wedded ™ “Prendi l’Anello, prendi; permisse, che il Nobil’huomo dal dito glielo cavasse, e poscia di quello ne fusse libero, & assoluto possessore, e padrone.”

Ibid., pp. 86-87. ” Monticolo, “L’apparitio Sancti Marci,” p. 130.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS popular piety and civic patriotism into one cult. In his book on the saints, Gabriele Fiamma, a fifteenth-century canon regular

of San Marco, summarized the conventional Venetian attitude , toward the cult when he said, “I was born a Venetian and live in this happy homeland, protected by the prayers and guardian-

ship of Saint Mark, from whom that Most Serene Republic |

acknowledges its greatness, its victories, and all its good fortune.””3 The cult fully dominated Venetian piety by the eleventh century, when the inventio of Mark’s relics—in the words of Peyer, a “state miracle” —confirmed God’ preference for the established form of ducal government. Thereafter, the Evange-

| list came gradually to signify far more than the privileges of

the doges, until finally he came to personify the republic and | to represent the entire civic corpus: in the ensuing centuries, as the doges lost their powers of lordship, ultimate authority became increasingly abstract and was invested in the mystical person of Saint Mark.” In addition, the Saint Mark cult had an institutional dimension of great economic and social significance. Not only was the basilica a state church and the artistic center of the city, but also the trustees for San Marco's endowment, the procurators, were by the thirteenth century Venice's most important source of credit, executors of private testaments, guardians for orphans, administrators of private trusts,

and financial advisors. The procurators became a substitute i paterfamilias with public responsibilities for preserving the family structure of patrician families; wealthy benefactors

| ' frequently left their entire patrimony to be mianaged by the procurators, thus attesting to their faith in the stability of the state. As Rheinhold C. Mueller has observed, “There was

little dichotomy between private wealth and public policy.”” 3 “Son nato Veneziano e vivo in questa felice patria, difesa dall’ orationi e dal presidio di S. Marco, da cui reconosce quella Serenissima Repubblica le grandezze, le vittorie e tutte le felici avventure sue.” Quoted in Tramontin,

. “San Marco,” p. 64. ™4 Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, especially p. 15. Cf. Tramontin, “San Marco,” p. 62. For a view that sees the Saint Mark cult as a fortuitous tie to papal authority rather than as a symbolic challenge to it, see Guglielmo Biasutti, La tradizione marciana aquileiese.

75 Mueller, “The Procurators of San Marco,” p. 220. Also see Demus, The Church of San Marco.

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With such a total political, religious, and economic commit-

ment to his cult, Saint Mark not surprisingly became synony- | mous with the Venetian republic.

SAINTS THEODORE, GEORGE, AND NICHOLAS

The Venetians prided themselves in their hagiolatry, and the | crown of saint-worship was the possession and veneration ot , numerous relics. About all that William Wey, the fifteenthcentury English pilgrim to the Holy Land, recorded of his stay

in Venice was the abundance of sacred relics found there; his . list was long and impressive.’® In the seventeenth century when most of the official designations of patron saints were made, in addition to Saint Mark Venice listed as principal patrons the Virgin Annunciate and Lorenzo Giustiniani (the first patriarch of Venice) and sixteen saints as secondary patrons.” Many of the saints and beatifieds revered in Venice were of local

origin—such as Saint Pietro Orseolo, a tenth-century doge who retired to a monastery to follow Saint Romuald—or had relics housed in Venice, or were associated with some particular event in Venetian history, such as Saint Marina, who was given credit for the recovery of Padua in 1509, and Saint Roch, whose adoration became official policy after the plague of 1576.” During the crusades, in particular, the remains of numerous saints were stolen, bought, or transferred from the East to new homes in the churches of Venice. Earlier Byzantine influences in Ven-

ice made the new Eastern cults seem less exotically oriental; there were, for example, a large number of churches dedicated to Old Testament prophets in Venice, as was common in Eastern 7° William Wey, The Itineraries .. . to Jerusalem, A.D. 1458 and A.D. 1462; and to Saint James of Compostella, A.D. 1456, p. 53. For a list of relics removed

to Venice see Nicole Hermann-Mascard, Les reliques des saints, pp. 368-69. , Niero, “I santi patroni,” p. 78. 8 Ibid., pp. 87-88; Giovanni Musolino, “Feste religiose popolari,” pp

neziani, p. 105. | 224—25; Giovanni Musolino, A. Niero, and S. Tramontin, Sainti e beati ve-

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Christianity but comparatively rare in Western.’® Yet, Venetian

hagiolatry was more Roman than Byzantine: of the 160 saints | pictured in the mosaics of San Marco, most are Western in

| origin.*” Consequently, the idea of a Venice more Byzantine :

than Italian seems mere romance. : The possession of relics, in most instances acquired centuries |

| after the end of Byzantine control over Venice, took’on singular political importance in Venice, especially in the cases of three secondary saints whose hagiography contributed to civic mythology.°' Saint Theodore was the most important of the three,

but the history of his cult is a chronicle of confusions. The Venetian Theodore, who shared with Saint George the iconographical designation as an armor-clad warrior slaying a dragon, was possibly a fusion of two early Christians: one was a soldier martyred at Amasea in Pontus whose feast day was November

9, and the other a general of Heraclea whose feast day was February 7.°* In 1096 the body of Saint Theodore of Amasea was brought to an unknown repository in Venice; that of Saint Theodore of Heraclea arrived in 1267 and was deposited in the church of San Salvatore (see map).*? When the Senate declared in 1450 that on November 9 each year a ducal procession be formed in honor of Saint Theodore, the destination was to be

San Salvatore; thus, on the feast day of one Theodore, the ” Silvio Tramontin, “Influsso orientale nel culto dei santi a Venezia fino al secolo xv,” and Antonio Niero, “Culto dei santi dell’antico testamento,” p. * 157.

8° Silvio Tramontin, “I santi dei mosaici marciani,” especially pp. 135, 152. 8! This section will be concerned only with those saints who had a place in the annual round of civic rituals and became important to the civic cult. For other saints honored in Venetian ritual see chapter 6. 82 Bibliotheca Sanctorum, s.v. “Teodoro, soldato, santo, martire ad Amasea,” by Agostino Amore and Maria Chiara Celletti, 12:238— 42. Cf. Lucy Menzies, The Saints in Italy p. 428. On the legends associated with Saint Theodore see Hippolyte Delehaye, Les légendes greques des saints militaires, 1975, pp. 11— 43.

| 83 Andrea Dandolo, Chronicon venetum, col. 336; Niero, “I santi patroni,” pp. 91-92; Musolino, “Feste religiose popolari,” p. 230. The Theodore transfers and the revival of the cult in 1450 contradict the claim that “the Byzantine warrior was allowed to vanish entirely in the restoration [of Saint Mark] of 1094.” Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 111-12.

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS |

relics of the other were revered.** The 1450 decree of a festum

solemnis for Saint Theodore seemed to indicate a revival of interest in the saint who, according to local tradition, had preceded Saint Mark as the local patron; and indeed the cult con-

tinued to receive special attention during the following century, | culminating in 1552 when the Scuola di San Teodoro, founded as a scuola piccola in the thirteenth century, was elevated to the status of a Scuola Grande.® This elevation gave the devotees of Saint Theodore a position in all the great civic processions.

If the largely fourteenth-century sources can be believed, Saint Theodore was the first protector-saint of the Venetian dux

at the time when the dux was still a Byzantine military commander of a province, for whom Theodore would have been a

symbol of the sovereignty of Constantinople. The first ducal | chapel at the new governmental seat of Rialto was built and dedicated to Theodore in or before 819 by a wealthy Greek named Marco, who was often confused in Venetian lore with a more famous sixth-century general of the same name. But after the translatio of Saint Mark the first patron saint lost his place of importance, and his chapel disappeared or was incorporated into the more imposing basilica of San Marco. In the basilica mosaics, the two representations of Theodore as a soldier placed him as a counterpart to Saint George. Memory of him as the first protector was de-emphasized if not erased.*° As an unwanted reminder of Venice's early subjection to the supe-

rior authority of Byzantium, it is likely that Saint Theodore was relegated to the status of a minor saint until the slow eclipse of Byzantine power in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries resolved and made irrelevant any political problem with his cult. *4 MCV, Cod. Cicogna 2043, fol. 31; Nicolo Trevisan, “Cronaca veneta dalle origine al 1585,” BMV, MS Italiano vil, 519 (8438), fol. 262v (new foliation) ;

Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 89. As late as 1448 the relics of Theodore of Amasea were still highly honored and were still distinguished from those of Theodore of Heraclea. See a description of a ducal procession to San Nicolo al Lido in Giorgio Dolfin, “Cronica di Venezia,” BMV, MS Italiano vil, 794

(8503), fol. 302. Cf. Demus, The Church of San Marco, p. 22, n. 74. , 8° Pullan, Rich and Poor in Venice, p. 34. 86 Demus, The Church of San Marco, pp. 21-22. Cf. Tramontin, “I santi dei

mosaici marciani,” p. 142.

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The possibility has been raised, however, that the tradition of Saint Theodore as the first patron of Venice is pure canard. Antonio Niero rejects the belief that Saint Theodore was the first protector, argues that the earliest sign of his cult in Venice comes from the tenth century, and suggests that the tradition of Saint Theodore as the first palladium arose during the War

of Chioggia, fought against Genoa between 1377 and 1381.°%? | Indeed, Theodore, the warrior saint, may have been re-elevated in the late fourteenth century as a foil to Genoa’s soldier-patron, Saint George, and to provide Venice with a military protector different from George. Theodore was not by then the iconographic competition to Mark that he had been even the century before, when Saint George, rather than Theodore, was chosen for a relief prominently placed on the west facade of San Marco. But Theodore’s star was rising even before the Genoese

wars, for in 1329 his statue was placed atop one of the two columns in the Piazzetta of the Ducal Palace, making him an equal partner to Mark in guarding this distinguished entrance

by sea to the political and religious center of the Venetian do- | minion.®® Probably only excavations for the chapel of Saint

Theodore that reputedly preceded San Marco could determine | whether the early duces did, after all, honor Saint Theodore

and then later expunge all traces of his patronage in favor of | Saint Mark, or whether the tradition of his initial protection , was the invention of some later period. At any rate, by the - sixteenth century he was widely believed to have been the first patron and was thus a political and military symbol second only

to Mark, superior even to George, and the object of official

ritual devotions consisting of an annual ducal procession. ®? | Respect for Saint George was nonetheless of long standing in | Venice, and although he never received the official recognition accorded to Theodore, George was important in art and mythology. Like Theodore he was a saint made much of in Constantinople, but, unlike Theodore, he attained immense popularity in the West, becoming the patron of England, Catalonia, °7 Niero, “I santi patroni,” pp. 92—93.

88 Demus, The Church of San Marco, pp. 22, 133-34. . 8° On the procession see Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 89. |

96

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS Aragon, Portugal, and more than a hundred Italian cities.°° His cult, one of the oldest in Venice, probably came from Ravenna, and he was the object of homage by the Particiaci doges, who had a sacellum built for him sometime before 829; the Particiacis choice of Saint George may have served their anti-Carolingian, pro-Byzantine policies as did Saint Mark: one scholar suggests that naming the island opposite the Ducal Palace (see

map) after Saint George identified the strait of water in be-

tween with the Dardanelles, at the time also named after

_ George, and thus made a metaphor for Venice’ Byzantine | connection.”?

Saint George's cult spread in the eleventh and twelfth centu-

ries. The mosaics in San Marco picture him in three places standing next to Theodore and once as a solitary soldier; in the thirteenth century the procurators of San Marco chose to commission for the west front of the basilica a relief of Saint George as a parallel to a Greek relief of the soldier Saint Demetrius, brought to Venice in the spoils of the Fourth Crusade; and it was Saint George who figured among the triad of protectors in

the fourteenth-century fable of the fisherman and the ring.* In 1462 the Senate ordered the captain of the sea or any other official in the Aegean to procure “by prudent means and without violence” the famed relic of the head of Saint George; this

commission accomplished, the head was deposited in the mo- , nastic church of San Giorgio Maggiore, where in 1971 Kenneth Setton rediscovered it in a cupboard.** Besides the monks of San Giorgio, a scuola of Dalmatians (San Giorgio degli Schiavoni) made the soldier-saint their patron; and for them Vittore

Carpaccio executed the famous cycle of paintings on Saint George’s life. By the sixteenth century, however, the Venetians honored Saint George principally because they possessed a famous relic. Saint George was a popular protector of Venice, to be sure, but he was not an official patron, nor had he any longer °° Kenneth M. Setton, “Saint George’s Head,” pp. 2—4. On the Greek leg-

ends regarding Saint George see Delehaye, Les légendes greques, pp. 45—76. , *! Carlo Candiani, “Antiche titoli delle chiese,” pp. 111-31. * Tramontin, “I santi det mosaici marciani,” p. 143; Demus, The Church of San Marco, pp. 126—35. *3 Setton, “Saint George's Head,” pp. 9-10.

97

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS a capacity for political symbolism comparable to that of Saint Mark and Saint Theodore. This fact was apparent in the absence of any civic ritual devoted exclusively to Saint George.

As patron of sailors, Saint Nicholas had a sinecure in the maritime republic. The cult of Saint Nicholas spread in the

West after citizens of Bari rescued the saint's relics from Myra , in 1087, an act that consequently turned their city into a pilgrimage center. Venetians made a second raid on Myra in 1116

and claimed to have brought back the true remains of Nicholas, . but they were never able to convince the rest of the world that their relics were more authentic than those of Bari.** Patrick Geary explains these two transfers and the Venetian inventio of Saint Mark in 1094 as manifestations of the commercial competition between Bari and Venice for control of the transport and marketing of Apulian grain, and in fact the two earli-

est accounts of the Barian transfer emphasize that the Barians were initially moved to steal Saint Nicholas’ remains by rumors

that the Venetians were planning to do so themselves.” The acquisition of the body of Saint Nicholas implied that his protection and favor would be granted to the possessor, an important factor in competition over shipping lanes. Saint Nicholas in the end divided his favor: Bari became the goal of pilgrims, but Venice captured the commerce. As was the case with the cults

of Saints Mark and Theodore, the legend of the Saint Nicholas transfer was closely tied to the secular history of the Venetian commune. The Venetians placed their relics in a monastery on ‘the Lido (see map), which had already been built in 1053 in honor of Saint Nicholas.%® Nicholas was widely popular among the sea-going populace of Venice: he appeared seven times, always in prominent places, in the San Marco mosaics; he was

the third protector-saint in the legend of the fisherman and 4 Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 115-27; Adriaan D. DeGroot, Saint. Nicholas, pp. 31-35; Charles W. Jones, Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan, pp. - 172-209. Also see idem, The Saint Nicholas Liturgy and its Literary Relationships (Ninth to Twelfth Centuries).

% Geary, Furta Sacra, pp. 124-27; Jones, Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan, pp. 83, 177, 194. 96 Tramontin, “I santi dei mosaici marciani,” p. 137; Musolino, “Feste reli-

giose popolari,” p. 218. |

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the ring; and he was honored in official rites and in a parish

festival.

The doge and civil magistrates revered Nicholas twice a year.

First, the church of San Nicolo al Lido was from the eleventh century the location of an annual rite of benedictio to propitiate the sea.*’ There is nothing to indicate that the ceremony was at first any more than a simple invocation of Saint Nicholas to protect Venetian sailors and a benediction of the Adriatic with holy water, but when the benedictio rite evolved into the elaborate Ascension Day marriage of the sea, discussed in the next chapter, a pilgrimage visit to San Nicolo was retained. The ritual homage the patriarch and the doge paid at the monastic church signified perhaps that Saint Nicholas himself officiated

over the marriage of the doge and the sea. Until 1172 the location of San Nicolo was also the site where citizens assembled to acclaim the new doges, and the monastery there was used throughout the Renaissance as a banquet hall for departing captains general. San Nicolo al Lido was gradually transformed from a center of peculiar religious and political significance, rivaling San Marco and the Ducal Palace, to the gateway and border of the city. In his protection of the Venetians at sea and his patronage of the doge and captain general, Saint Nicholas complemented and balanced Saint Mark, both in his spiritual functions and in the urban location of his major shrine. The second official annual occasion was on December 6, the feast day of Saint Nicholas, which was commemorative as well

as solicitous of the saint’s favor. Doge Enrico Dandolo, the hero : of the fabled conquest of Constantinople in 1204, died before he could return to Venice for his triumphal reception; so his successor, Pietro Ziani, had a chapel built in the Ducal Palace in memory of the blind warrior, dedicated it to Saint Nicholas, and decreed that every year on December 6 the doge and Signoria hear a mass sung there.*® If the chapel dedication is an indication, Saint Nicholas seems to have been credited with the success of Venetian naval exploits, and it became an obligation °7 Samuele Romanin, Storia documentata di Venezia, 1:281; Lina Padoan . Urban, “La festa della Sensa nelle arti e nell’iconografia,” p. 312. °8 Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 2:139-91; MCV, MS Venier P.D. 517b, under heading “Decembre.”

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AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS

of the doge to offer prayers to Nicholas in order to retain the saint's favor. The Saint Nicholas chapel was the only one within the walls of the Ducal Palace that hosted an annual ducal cere-

monial visit and thus had an affinity —albeit a relatively minor | one—to the doge’s other private chapel, the basilica of San Marco. For the ducal and ecclesiastical establishment Saint Mark and Saint Nicholas formed a “binomial mystery,” a dual

protectorship that signified Venetian independence and rights | over the sea lanes and symbolized, in addition, what Roberto Cessi has identified as the concrete political relationship between the doge and the patriarch.®® In representing the city’s evangelical heritage and its maritime destiny, the pairing of Saint Mark and Saint Nicholas was similar to the pairing of the doge and patriarch, who stood respectively for the political and ecclestiastical authority mystically unified in the Venetian res publica. From a theoretical and a practical point of view, these two partnerships were unequal: both Saint Nicholas and the patriarch possessed divine rights and privileges, but their authority never matched that of Saint Mark or the doge. Hence, the primacy of the political hierarchy in all aspects of life was again enunciated in a sanctified context; and the doge’s attendance at mass in the Saint Nicholas chapel not only confirmed his political concern for the Nicholas cult but adopted the cult for the magnification of the doge and republic. Saint Nicholas also enjoyed popular religious devotions that had intriguing parallels to the ducal ceremonies. The parish of “San Nicold dei Mendicoli (see map) was one of the poorest in

Venice (a condition echoed in the name mendicoli) and was almost exclusively populated by fishermen, who annually elected

a parish chief called the “doge of the Nicolotti.” The name is significant since it offers both a popular imitation of elite political terminology and an index of the extent to which the saint's

cult reached the common people. After each new plebian doge was elected, he proceeded to the parish church of San Nicolo dei Mendicoli, where he knelt before the altar of the saint to swear

loyalty to the parish. The parish priest formally consigned to. 89 Cessi’s work on this point is cited and discussed in Tramontin, “I santi dei mosaici marciani,” p. 137.

100

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS him a standard depicting Saint Nicholas, and a Te Deum was sung. The following day the patrician doge honored the doge of the Nicolotti in a formal reception. Throughout the year at

public festivals the doge of the Nicolotti was allowed to dress in scarlet satins and in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to wear the wig and cap of a gentleman.'®° Unfortunately, the . extant information on this popular ceremony is, to my knowl-

edge, entirely from the early modern period, so there is no | record of when the practice began. The populace of Venice, however, had been divided sometime before the sixteenth century into factions of Nicolotti and Castellani, who on some

holidays fought pitched battles with fists and sticks for the , possession of a bridge; thus the institution of the doge of the Nicolotti may have signified official recognition of an ancient geographical division of the populace. The imitation of an elite political institution was common in late medieval and Renaissance Europe, where Lords of Misrule held sway on festive occasions; yet the doge of the Nicolotti was not elected in jest or as a burlesque of elite practices, as was the custom elsewhere at carnival time. To what degree the doge of the Nicolotti was anything more than a ceremonial representative of the parish is unknown, but his office shows that the lower classes were neither unaware of the charm and political symbolism of the annual ducal ceremonies nor ignorant of the significance of a ducal investiture. The Saint Nicholas honored by the Venetian fisherfolk was, after the Virgin, one of the most universally popular saints in the Middle Ages.!°! Several legends portray Nicholas as a mar-

itime saint, saving sailors from peril in a storm, rescuing drowning men, or walking on the waves to calm a storm; but he was often called on to provide help in other emergencies. He was credited with providing dowries for poor marriageable

girls, giving babies to barren couples, and succoring children; | in short he was, according to Adriaan De Groot, the guardian '0° Musolino, “Feste religiose popolari,” p. 219. 101 The monuments to Saint Nicholas in Europe surely number in the thousands. Meisen’s quite incomplete list of monuments in France, Germany, and

the Low Countries enumerated 2,137 items. Jones, Saint Nicholas of Myra, Bari, and Manhattan, p. 3.

101

AUSPICIOUS BEGINNINGS of the entire process of human reproduction and family growth, from courtship and procreation to the protection of vulnerable offspring. De Groot sees the combination of fertility and maritime themes as particularly fortuitous in psychological terms, since there are analogies between the emergencies of shipwreck and childbirth: both are moments largely out of human control

when life hangs in the balance; only a safe arrival in port or parturition brings relief of tension and suffering. Fertility sym-

bolism was clearly woven into the very fabric of the Saint Nicholas cult; yet another aspect of Saint Nicholas was that he gave without demanding anything in return—he did not have to be propitiated like a harsh Neptune—and thus he symbolized the higher power of giving in any social relationship. His other

patronates of transport, communication, trade, baking, and moneylending (bread and money “grow”) conform to this com-

plex of helping, giving, and ensuring fertility.'°? In Venice these elemental functions, so obviously important to the populace, were fully recognized in the governmental attention to Saint Nicholas’s cult epitomized by the homage rendered to him

at the Ascension Day marriage of the sea ceremonies; and the

popular cult, so alive with fertility associations, was made an | | institution with the doge of the Nicolotti. There was in this case complete harmony between popular desires and elite priorities. JHE LEGENDS of the founding of Venice and the ceremonies for

saints’ feast days catechized sixteenth-century Venetians about their city’s noble foundation in freedom, about its divinely or-

dained military and maritime destiny, about ducal rights to authority over ecclesiastical institutions, and, most of all, about

Venice's autonomy from other powers in the world. None of these ideas belonged only to Venice; any city or country, of 102 De Groot, Saint Nicholas, pp. 108—9, 152-60, 163, 177. A mythic figure as historically important and as widely popular as Saint Nicholas must not be

reduced to a single set of symbolic and pyschological significances; thus, De , Groot’s thesis should be taken with extreme caution. I have abstracted some of

his observations here because they seem to elucidate better the Venetian cult of Saint Nicholas, but one should be fully aware that, for other places and times, this fertility interpretation may be artificial.

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course, could,and usually did pretend to special divine favor through hagiography. And, although there was a singular concordance in the sixteenth century between Venice's liturgical and hagiographical heritage and its political ideals, discerning scholars of the times were less likely to be convinced than were their ancestors. They needed to find a more historically grounded justification for Venice's far-reaching claims, a supporting ar-

gument based on human rather than mystical sources. That support was to be found in the gifts of Pope Alexander III.

, THREE

A GRATEFUL POPE AND A DOWERED BRIDE: IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES THE DONATION OF POPE ALEXANDER III

The ducal trionfi, that is, the gifts of Pope Alexander III, symbolized Venice's jurisdictional autonomy. According to the tra-

dition accepted in the sixteenth century, Pope Alexander III gave these trionfi to Doge Sebastiano Ziani in 1177 to repay him for his role in the struggle between the pope and Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Frederick's expedition against the towns

of Lombardy and Tuscany alarmed the pope, who was ever , antagonistic to imperial interference in Italian affairs; therefore, fearing capture by the German knights, Alexander fled and, in disguise, sought refuge among the “. . . pious, generous, and humble Venetians, lovers of virtue and good Christians.”’ Alexander spent his first night in Venice outside the door of San Salvatore, then moved to Santa Maria della Carita (see map), where a pilgrim recognized him and reported his presence to the doge. Doge Sebastiano Ziani unhesitatingly offered to protect the pope and to mediate in the dispute with the emperor. In thanks for the doge’s support, Pope Alexander con’ [Pope Alexander] “Montete in barca poi con vigoria, / per gionger quanto prima a la cittade / dove risciede la gran Signoria, / saggia gentil, & piena di bontade, / credendo, che la gran malinconia / ch’havea nel cor sia estinta per

pietade, / di generosi, & humil Venetiani, / amator di virtuosi, & buon Christiani.” Ferrarese, Historia di Papa Alessand III, no pagination. The best

sources for the donation story are BMV, MS Italiano Ix, 28 (6301), and BMV, ; MS Italiano vil, 728 (8070); Biblioteca Nazionale, Florence, MS Magliabecchiana Xxv, 8, 273, col. 2; MCV, I, 383 (1497), fols. 25v ff.; and the poem by Pietro de’ Natali. All are published in O. Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali sulla pace di Venezia tra Alessandro III e Federico Barbarossa.” Cf.

Marcus Paschalicus, Orationes due Marci Paschalici philosophiae et theologiae | doctoris. Altera de scientiarum laudibus. Altera vero de Veneta sponsaliorum maris ratione, and Tramontin, “Realita e leggenda,” p. 57.

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ceded to Ziani and his successors the first of the trionfi, the right to carry a white candle in processions on major feast days as a “sign of noble honor” and as a token of the pope’s love.” When Doge Ziani commissioned two envoys to approach Barbarossa in Pavia, he sealed their orders with wax; but the pope wished the wax seals to be exchanged for something more dignified and thus granted the doge the privilege of using lead seals in imitation of papal practice.* Barbarossa, having answered the ambassadors’ entreaties with threats of death to all Venetians unless (according to one source) they surrendered the pope in irons, commanded his son, Otto, to lead a fleet of some seventy-five galleys against Venice.* Ziani steadfastly prepared a much smaller fleet to defend the pope and city. As Doge Ziani embarked for battle, Alexander invested him with a sword, symbolic of the justice of the doge’s cause, and assured salvation 2 “Agiongendo quel [Pope Alexander] disse: ‘Figliol franco, / questo a te dono et a’ toi subcessori, / che mai per tempo alcun non venga manco, / ma sempre quel portate in vostri honori / vele processione et feste grande, / 0 sia vostre persone dentro o fori.’ ” Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p.

142. “Donono el cirio biancho el nobel duca / et a so’ sucessori in tute bande. / E vol che quelo seco senpre duca, [i]’/n segno de fede vera e puritade, / et che nel mondo questo tal relucha.” Appendix 1 in Zenatti, “II poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” pp. 176-77. “Come alla Chiesa il Papa fu arri-

vato, /un cereo bianco egli si fece dare, /e quello dopo al Duce ha presentato, / che la festa di San Marco il die portare, / & esso il prese, havendosi inchinato, / e’ | Papa disse, cid s’ha da stimare, / come per segno di notabile honore, / e fara ancora segno del mio amore.” Ferrarese, Historia di Papa Alessand III, no pagination. Ferrarese blames the entire confrontation on the forgeries of a false cardinal and is hence far less anti-imperial than the other writers. 8 Some of the sources make the new seals of gold or silver. Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 146. The following quotations are from

Zenatti. “Vedendo el papa la comissione / sigelata cum cera, cum fervore / subito volse far provixione / che ‘| doxe havesse sua _ bola pendente / d’oro, d’arzento e de tuta raxone.” Appendix I, p. 167. “Volendo la

credenza in carta dare, / bollandola con ciera, immantanente / il papa in-

pronpte di metal fe’ fare, / qual oggi vedi s’usa; e tal consente / pria s‘inprontasse, ma non col favore / fanno li tre ch’oggi bollan pendente.” Appendix II, p. 186. “ ‘Io [Pope Alexander] voio che questa letera sia bollada con bolla de plombo, sula qual sia da un ladi misier san Marcho e lo doxe apresso, e dal’oltro ladi sia scrito el nome del doxe; cossi como vien bollade le mie letere con bolla de plumbo e con misier sen Piero entro.’ ” Appendix tI, p. 194. 4 Ibid., p. 194.

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| IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

to all who touched it.° The Venetians, victorious despite their , inferior numbers, captured Otto and a number of imperial barons, whom Doge Ziani presented to the pope as captives. As a reward the pope gave Ziani a gold ring and the right to marry

the sea as a token of the doge’s “lordship of the sea” and “in |

sign of perpetual dominion.”® Otto came from his prison to the pope and implored that he be allowed to return to his father to

counsel him to relent; then, as the pope’s vassal, Otto persuaded Barbarossa to sign a formal peace treaty.’ Consequently, on Ascension Day, 1177, Frederick and Alexander were reconciled at San Marco, where the emperor kissed the pope’s feet;

in memory of the peace Alexander granted a plenary indulgence to all those who in the future visited San Marco on Ascension.®

The peace secured, Alexander set sail for Ancona in the company of Barbarossa, Ziani, and various Venetians. When they landed, the citizens of Ancona appeared with two umbrellas — ° “Una spada poi in li [Pope Alexander] fece dare, / e quella benedi con propria bocca / ciascuno che con quella haura a toccare / giu di galea convien che trabocca, / e tutti gli altri haverete a superare, / onde alli nostri il Para diso tocca, / chi morira andara in santa gloria, / prego il Signor, che vi doni vittoria. / La spada li fu data per segnale, / chei Principia venire la portasse, / il Duceando contral’ Imperiale, / & ordino ch’ogn’un s’apparecchiasse, / |’armata gia come s‘havesse l’ale, / l’aere, e la terra parea che tremasse, / e ad ogni qualitade di persone / dié il Papa santo la benedittione.” Ferrarese, Historia

di Papa Alessand III, no pagination.

. © Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 148. ’ Tbid., pp. 170-71. 8 Barbarossa: “Quale piu piace a vostra santitate / et de voi duce, []’] e buon metter la falca, / si ch’el se taglia tutte le mal note / erbe cressute de falsa

semenca, / et le buone rimanga ben netate.’ / Dato a cotal parole audienga / questi maestri: ‘Che te par de fare? / Che '] padre meo sia ala vostra presenga, / el qual per modo alcun non vol restare / ch’el non attenda ben de far l’acordo, / che ‘! m’a promesso: a voi sta el dimandare / Ma per vostra honoranca ve aricordo, / che ne la ecclesia de miser san Marco / il sia , _congato cotanto discordo. / Quivigl’imperator stenderal’arco / dela mala vog~ lienca per lui tolta / contra de voi, aleviando el carco.’ ” Ibid., p. 157. The account of the reconciliation in Martin da Canal is far more acerbic. Les estoires de Venise, p. 40. On the indulgence Pope Alexander granted see “Dell’origine et accresimento della citta di Venetia et isole della lagune principiato dell’anno CCCCXXI et molte altre cose notabili fino l’anno MDLVI,” Syracuse University Library (hereafter SUL), Ranke MS 69, fol. 72r.

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insignia of princely distinction—as gifts for the pope and em-

peror, but Alexander refused to accept his until a third umbrella | was provided for the doge.® Later, as the party approached Rome, city officials met them with eight banners and long silver trumpets, which Alexander gave to Ziani as an additional

honor.'° Doge Ziani, with his newly acquired trionfi—the white candle, lead seals, sword, gold ring, umbrella, eight banners, and silver trumpets—entered the Holy City, and at Saint John Lateran the pope solemnly confirmed the privileges and honors he had bestowed on the basilica of San Marco, the commune of Venice, and the doge.”? This legend did at least veil some historical truths. An En-

glish witness to the signing of the peace, one Nicholas of Dunstable, recounted the events with great attention to visual

detail—but mentioned nothing of the papal gifts to the doge.” There was, in fact, neither a naval victory nor even a naval

battle; in 1176 the Lombard League defeated the imperial army at the battle of Legnano. Venice did not actively participate in the war and was so equivocal in choosing sides that San Marco was chosen as a neutral place for the peace negotiations. The

doge’s role as a mediating prince at the peace talks in San Marco, however, contributed significantly to the prestige of his office and to the genesis of the legend. The peace marked the 9 “E qui l’onbrela el papa al doxe dona / e a so’ sucessori, e cusci porta / a tute feste, come el vero sona.” Appendix | in Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 177. “Giunti in Ancona, il popol lor insenna / a presentarli onbrelle due, ma il papa / un’ altra termino che ‘| dogie inpenna, / et sempre per memoria innanzi i capa.” Appendix I! in Zenatti, “II poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 190.

'0 “Questo anchora al doxe se ge dona, / per piu magnificar: trombe d’arzento, / che avanti senpre la festa li sona.” Appendix lin ibid., p. 177. “In Roma giunti, al papa é presentato / di sol quattro colori otto vexili, / scorgon delli elementi un doppio stato, / con trono uno e tube otto argentee e brilli, / le qual tantosto il papa largi al duca / per preminentie di futuri stilli.” Appendix

in ibid., p. 190. 11 Pope Alexander: “ ‘Mo ch’io som in la mi sega, io ve confermo tute le perdonanee e le honorance ch’io ve 6 concedude ala gliexia de misier sen Marco

et a vu’ et al comun de Veniexia como a fioli dela santa mare Gliexia.’ ” Appendix tin ibid., p. 198. 12 Rodney M. Thomson, “An English Eyewitness of the Peace of Venice, 1177.”

107

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES | : failure of the German emperors to assert political control over

northern Italy, a reality that explains the anti-imperial tone of |

the story. Despite their reluctance to defend Italian liberty and papal honor, the Venetians did not come away from the peace empty-handed: Frederick allowed Venetian traders a complete

exemption from imperial tolls throughout the Holy Roman Empire, and Pope Alexander transferred the ecclesiastical juris-

diction over Dalmatia to the patriarch of Grado, an act that

furthered Venetian dominion over the Adriatic. | During the late twelfth century Venice was subject to recurring threats from Constantinople, Norman Sicily, and Hungary, as well as from the German Empire; so the legend may also represent the successful elimination of all of these threats to

Venetian independence. In a sense then, the imperial and papal , concessions and the failure of Barbarossa to establish hegemony

in northern Italy signaled the full assertion of Venetian lordship over the Adriatic. The symbolic gifts in the legend may, furthermore, represent the effort Venice began to make at that time to impose treaties legalizing its dominance over the area.” Pope Alexander's legendary grant to Doge Ziani of the right to marry the sea, therefore, may have symbolized a particular political situation, but one somewhat different from that described in the legend told in later centuries. Elements of the legend existed in the thirteenth century, but

they were inchoate. Bonincontro de’ Bovis 1317 narration of the legend is the oldest extant version.'* By 1319 there was a fresco cycle depicting the peace in the chapel of San Nicolo in the Ducal Palace, and the story also appeared in Doge Andrea '® Lane, Venice, pp. 57~58; William H. McNeill, Venice, pp. 26-28. '* Zanetti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 123. Zanetti argues (p. 122, n. 1) that there were probably paintings of the event in the Ducal Palace during

the thirteenth century. This opinion is confirmed by a sixteenth-century source that states that the Senate “deliberandosi cinquanta anni doppo, che si dipingesse ne muri della Sala del maggior Consiglio, tutto il successo di quella

guerra.” Girolamo Bardi, Vittoria navale ottenuta dalla republica venetiana

contra Othone, figliuolo di Federico primo imperadore; per la restitutione di , Alessandro terzo, pontefice massimo, venuto a Venetia, p. 30. An ellipsis in the MS of Martin da Canal’s Les estoires de Venise, p. 40, prevents us from knowing what parts of the legend other than the gift of the umbrella were current in 1275.

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Dandolo’s mid-fourteenth-century chronicle. The definitive, fully developed source, however, is the poem composed in 1381

or 1382 by Pietro de’ Natali, the bishop of Equilio (Iesolo).'° Members or persons in the employ of the governing Venetian establishment wrote all the fourteenth-century accounts; thus the legend as retold above was probably a late invention, officially asserted for political reasons some time after Venice had conquered Constantinople and firmly established mastery over the eastern Mediterranean, and it appealed to Venetians because it flattered not just the aristocratic doge but them all. Paintings, chronicles, histories, and inscriptions referred to the legendary gifts, but as late as 1485 it was possible for a Venetian writer to recount the events of the 1170s and to discuss Frederick Barbarossa’s Italian campaign without mention of the Alexandrine gifts.'° Evidently some skepticism was still possible. By the sixteenth century, nevertheless, the story of Alexander III's gift to Doge Ziani had become official dogma, and when paintings were planned to replace those destroyed in the 1577 fires in the Hall of the Great Council, the inclusion of the legend in a cycle of history paintings was hardly a striking innovation (see figures 1—4).'” The legend became the standard historical justification for the Venetians’ jurisdictional privilege and their spe-

cial devotion to the Holy See. On the eve of the famous interdict against Venice of 1606—7, a dispute between the Vene-

tian ambassador and Pope Clement VIII degenerated into a quarrel over the whole history of Venetian-papal relations. When Clement charged Venice with having stolen papal lands in the Romagna and denied the Venetians’ long loyalty to the

Papacy, the ambassador countered with the story of Doge Zianis service to Alexander III. Even though the pope ridiculed '? Zanetti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” pp. 105—26. '® Dolfin, “Cronica di Venezia,” BMV, MS Italiano vil, 794 (8503), fol. 68r—

, v. For a list of the sources defending the legend see Cornelio Frangipane, Per la historia di Papa Alessandro III publica nella sala regia a Roma, & del maggior

consiglio a Venetia. Allegatione in iure. 17 These paintings, still in place, are described and interpreted by Girolamo Bardi, Dichiaratione di tutte le istorie, che si contengono ne i quadri posti novamente nelle sale dello scrutinio, & del gran consiglio, del palagio ducale della serenissima republica di Vinegia. Also see Staale Sinding-Larsen, Christ in the Council Hall, pp. 21-29.

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IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

the story great respect.” . the account as mere myth, the Venetians, at least, still accorded | Each of Pope Alexander's gifts came to be interpreted as a symbol of a distinct ducal privilege or of a specific attribute of the Venetian polity. The gifts together affirmed Venice’ piety, devotion to the Church, and freedom from imperial supervision; the trionfi were carried in all major ducal processions, and many of them were common iconographical attributes of

Venice in paintings and sculpture. , | Only by a characteristic transmutation, however, did the white candle come to depict the true and pure faith of the Venetians. Long before the legendary gift of Alexander, bishops and popes had a candle carried before them in religious processions as a symbol of respect, and a candle-bearer also preceded

the Byzantine emperors in a triumph or in an entrance to a city.’ The candle probably did first appear as a ducal symbol in the 1170s, as the legend would have it, but for entirely different

reasons than those given. Without first obtaining the papal permission necessary to destroy a consecrated church with im-

punity, either Doge Vital I] Michiel or Sebastiano Ziani disman- | tled the chapel of San Geminiano to enlarge the piazza in front of San Marco. For this neglect the pope anathematized the doge and removed the anathema only when the doge agreed to rebuild the church and to commit himself and his successors to an annual penitential visit to the new San Geminiano. At the processional visit each year the parish priest of San Geminiano, “standing on the location of the old church, recalled the purpose of the visit, reminded the doge of his obligation to return the . following year, and gave him a candle to be used in all the ducal processions for the coming year.”° Through the introduction of , 18 Grendler, The Roman Inquisition, p. 252. 19 Fasoli, “Liturgia e cerimoniale ducale,” p. 273. 20 Ibid. ; Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, pp. 90, 298-99; ASV, Collegio Cerimoni-

ale 1, fol. 8r; Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, pp. 109, 496-97; Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 1:43—52; MCV, MS Venier P.D. 517b, under heading “Ottava di pasqua”; BMV, MS Latin 1, 172 (2276), fols. 52v—53r; Emmanuele Antonio Cicogna, Delle inscrizioni veneziane, 4:5, 8, n. 1; Doglioni, Le cose notabili, pp. 47-48. Tassini calls the original church, destroyed to make room for the enlarged piazza, San Allorquando. Feste, spettacoli, p. 77.

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112 |

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

the Alexander III legend, the candle, originally a symbol of penitence, was deliberately transformed into an insigne of honor, privilege, and faith. In the ducal processions the chaplain of the doge or an acolyte carried the white candle, and it was understood to be an acces-

sory of the doge himself; if for some reason the doge did not participate in a procession, the candle was not carried. Sansovino said that the candle recalled the promise of the doges to obtain peace for the Papacy and symbolized the patronia of the doge over the basilica of San Marco.”! One sixteenth-century writer reported that the candle showed how God had “illuminated” Doge Ziani and how Ziani had abolished darkness in the world when he had acted on behalf of Pope Alexander.”? An-

other said all of the gifts “showed that by means of their aid, kindness, virtues, [the Venetians] freed the Church of God from so many misfortunes, which had hung over it, so that not only the Roman Church but all of Italy must be always obliged [to them].””? The candle, therefore, identified the doge as the patron and protector of the Church, both the Roman Church through his defense of Pope Alexander and the Venetian Church

through his proprietorship of San Marco. , The Venetians were correct in pointing out that the use of lead seals was a mark of particular distinction. Venice was the only maritime republic in Italy that did not follow the chancellery practices of the communes in using wax seals for official documents but imitated instead the fashion of the popes, By-

zantine emperors, Italian dukes, and Norman princes. The Venetian use of lead or occasionally gold or silver seals was a practice reserved for the highest authorities, a sign of quasisovereignty. It has been suggested that the Venetians adopted the Byzantine imperial style of lead seals when they considered 2! Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 321v.

*2 Pope Alexander to Doge Ziani: “Io vi di questo Cerio imp[re]mese de Sume, accio Iddio vi illumini, et che colui, che é le tenebre, & da voi sia illuminado.” SUL, Ranke MS 69, fol. 70v. *° “Dimostro la Chiesa d’Iddio essere stata liberata dalle tante calamita, che gli soprastavavo, mediante gli aiuti loro, alla bonta, & virtt de’ quali non solo bisognava, che la Chiesa Romana, ma I'Italia tutta fosse per sempre obligata.” Bardi, Vittoria navale, p. 30.

113

| IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES themselves emancipated from Byzantium, but the earliest ex-

amples of the lead seals are from the mid-twelfth century, much later than the Venetian emancipation, and the earliest

| Venetian official documents, dating from between 1090 and 1108, lack such seals. The oldest lead seal comes from the period of Doge Pietro Polani (1130-48) and thus clearly precedes

the supposed donation by Alexander III. Despite its inability to | explain the origin of Venetian lead seals, however, the legend’s widespread acceptance gave Venice great prestige, a prestige illustrated by the Florentines’ request to Pope Alexander V (1409-10) for a grant to employ lead seals “just like the Venetians obtained from Pope Alexander III.”** The lead seals, like the sword, umbrella, banners, and trumpets, were primarily symbols of a political sovereignty that elevated Venice above the other incorporated communes.

In the accounts of Pope Alexander’s gifts, the sword was :

generally said to signify that the doges were true sons of the Mother Church, had defended her honor against the superbia of the emperor, and thus were endowed with a sense of true justice.”> But in the course of time, emphasis came to be placed ** Giacomo Bascape, “Sigilli della repubblica di Venezia,” pp. 93-95. Cf. Traité du gouvernement de la cité et seigneurie de Venise, 2:272—73.

7° “In quel giorno cum volunta [de] pura / el papa dono al doxe quela

spada / che avanti lui se porta; et ozi dura /cotal usanza, et cusci se vada / senpre portando i suo’ successori, / come se vede, per ogni siada; / e felo cavalier cum sumi honori, / cum tuti i successori che li monta / et qui’ .che po’ verano per tut’ori; / et questa spada, segondo se conta, / significa justicia per raxone.” Appendix ! in Zenatti, :“Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” pp. 168~69. “E in segnio di giustizia li largiva / la spada che a un sol taglio, e quella ‘i cigne / con propria mano e si llo benediva: / ‘Qual cavalier di Cristo, a chiu il cuor spigne / liberta, carita e vero amore / della giustitia, u’ por tutto t’alligne, / et certo spera, avrai sommo vigore / di conculcar la superbia canina / del nimico Ferigo, a suo dolore!’ ” Appendix 1! in Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” pp. 186-87. Pope Alexander: “ ‘Tuo’ questa spada, fiol de la santa Gliexia, e va’ a combater seguramente con questa spada, la qual io conciedo a ti et a tuti li tuo’ sucessori, che la diebia portar.’ “ Appendix i in _ Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” p. 195. Pope Alexander: “Cosi come i figlioli della S[an]ta Madre Giesia vano a Combater p[er] la Rason, combata queste Spada seguramlen|Ite che Iddio concedera Vittoria, et all’hora li Cinse la Spada, et benedillo condetto. I] Popolo et disse ciaschuno, che andera a combatter pler] la S[an]ta Madre Giesia Cattolica contro I’Imperador siano assolti di colpa, e di pena de tutti li suoi peccati.” SUL, Ranke MS 69, fol. 70v.

114 IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

almost exclusively on the sword as a symbol of justice. The sword was the most ancient of the ducal symbols; by the end of

the ninth century and probably earlier the Venetian dux, the provincial representative of Constantinople, acquired the Byzantine title of spatharius and later protospatharius, and the sword probably served as an insigne for both titles.*° As the position of the doges changed in the ensuing centuries, the sword gradually changed from an exclusively ducal emblem to

a symbol for the justice of the republic. In the visual arts a female personification of Justice holding a scale and sword ranked second only to the winged lion of Saint Mark as a symbol of the republic. In sixteenth-century ducal processions, the sword was the specific insigne of the judicial magistracies; usually the sword was carried by a nobleman scheduled to serve abroad as a provincial podesta or captain, and hence charged with bringing Venetian justice to the subject peoples. If no one

fitting that description was available, one of the giudici del proprio (judges of civil cases in the first instance) carried it. The symbolic bond between these officials of justice and the sword was so strong that when the ducal trionfi including the sword were excluded from a procession, as was the case on Giovedi

Grasso, then a guidice del proprio did not participate in the procession; likewise, if for any reason he was absent, the sword was eliminated. On one occasion, the procession for the Sunday of the Apostles in 1514, when the sword appeared despite the absence of a giudice del proprio, Marin Sanuto was outraged, confiding to his diary “That de jure one cannot carry the sword

without the giudice del proprio, because he is the podesta of Venice in criminal affairs.””” The sword’s double-edged symbol-

ism—as a papal gift to a prince who made peace and as an epitome of a legal system that promoted equality before the law and social concord—accorded well with the republic’s design to

present itself as harmonious. That the republic embraced the , *® Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, p. 63; Agostino Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 82—93.

*7 “Che de jure, non si pol portar spada senza Zudexe di proprio, perche quello e podesta di Venexia in criminal.” Sanuto, I diarti, 18:149. Also see

, Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fols. 317r, 322r, and MCV, MS Venier, P.D. 517b, under heading “avertimenti generali.”

115

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES principle of justice was an idea so pervasive that even one of La

Serenissimas most adamant critics, Jean Bodin, grudgingly admitted that in Venice one could find, if not the best form of government, at least just and equitable courts.”°

The umbrella came to typify both Venice's independence from the German Empire and the Papacy, as well as its sovereignty. The Venetian doges may have displayed an umbrella or baldachin as a personal attribute as early as the struggle between Frederick Barbarossa and Alexander III, since it was at about that time that baldachins were first used in English and Spanish coronations.?? Martin da Canal, who first reported the

gift of the umbrella but recorded that it was presented in Ven- | ice, not at Ancona, claimed that the pontiff explained to Doge _ Ziani that he was giving it “Because I have found no other son

| of the holy Church except for you.”°° The later sources, which added the detail of the pope’s demand for a third umbrella from

the citizens of Ancona, emphasized that previously only the pope and emperor had enjoyed such a dignity and that Barbarossa protested when Alexander conceded to Ziani and his successors the right to walk under an umbrella.** The umbrella was an”. . . honor which without any doubt rendered the doge

: similar to kings” and which denoted the doge a third potentate of the world equal in authority to pope and emperor.*” This was

an honor indeed, and one that offered stout underpinnings to _ ** Gilmore, “Myth and Reality,” pp. 440-42. ** Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 87-88. _ 3° Pope Alexander: “Porce que je ne trovai autre fil de sainte Yglise fors que toi, veul je que tu portes onbrele enci con je fais.” Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 40.

31 Pope Alexander: ” ‘O, é la terca? e se la non de xé, fila trovar per misier lo doxe.’ e misier lo imperador disse: ‘Misier, el no é plu che do segnori al mundo che diebia portar questa ombrella, goé vu’ e mi. e vu’ volé ch’el doxe

de Veniexia sia el terco segnor? parme stranio.’ e misier lo papa li respoxe: | “Cid @ che misier lo doxe sia una cossa con nu’, perco voio ch’elo ebia ombrella como nu’.’ e cossi fo dada la umbrella a misier lo doxe et ali suo’ sucessori.’ ”

Appendix I in Zenatti, “Il poemetto di Pietro de’ Natali,” pp. 197-98. Cf. SUL, Ranke MS 69, fol. 72v, and Bardi, Dichiaratione di tutte le istorie, fol. 38v.

32 The quote is from Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 322v. Also see SUL, Ranke MS 69, fol. 73r.

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the elevated conception the Venetians had of their city’s

freedom.

The legend of Doge Ziani’s entrance into Rome and the Alexandrine gifts of banners and silver trumpets from the Roman officials were patterned after a king’s advent into a city; such a reception for a doge implied that he was similar in status to an anointed king. The Frankish kings and the German emperors, for their part, adopted ceremonial entrances imitating the entry of the exarch of Ravenna into Rome. Thirty miles out of the city, judges and officials of Rome carrying their banners met the visitor and conducted him to Saint Peter’s, where he met the pope and higher clergy. The king's advent was a combination

of an imperial Roman triumph and the Christian Advent, whose prototype was Christ's Palm Sunday entrance into Jeru-

salem as king of the Jews; thus, the liturgical images of the _ Advent transformed a king into the likeness of Christ, and a terrestrial city into another Jerusalem.*? The Venetians did not: extend their interpretation of Doge Ziani’s entrance into Rome this far, but they were concerned to draw a parallel between the honors extended to kings and emperors at their entrance into

Rome and those granted the doge. The legendary gifts confirmed the Venetians’ interpretation. The silver trumpets were simply a well-known regal dignity to which the Venetians never attributed a peculiarly Venetian significance, as they did to the

umbrella and the banners. The instruments were adopted somewhat later than the other trionfi and are first mentioned in the 1229 promissione ducale of Doge Jacopo Tiepolo. A typical

comment about them came from Donato Giannotti: “I shall not speak about the music, for it is common to all the princes of Italy.”*4 The Venetians were concerned to have their doge appear like a prince, and the trumpets helped create a consonant image.

The banners (vexillum triumphale), on the other hand, were

rich with symbolic meaning. The use of banners may have _ “ Ernst H. Kantorowicz, “The ‘King’s Advent’ and the Enigmatic Panels in the Doors of Santa Sabina,” pp. 210-16. °* Giannotti, Libro de la republica de Vinitiani, fol. 65r—v. Also see Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 11, 91, and Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 321v.

117

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES come from Byzantium; they appeared in the West by the end of the tenth century, when they were introduced into the lit-

urgy to signify the triumph of Christ and later that of the saints. Their introduction may have implied that the Church’ initial resistance to the symbols of warfare was on the wane. They appeared in Venice about the year 1000, when Doge Pietro

II Orseolo, in launching a campaign against the Croats and Narentans in Dalmatia, assembled a fleet at Olivolo in order to receive a victory standard from Bishop Dominicus. On the way the expedition stopped at Grado, where the patriarch bestowed

on the doge a second victory banner that bore the image of Saint Hermagoras, the patron of Grado. The Venetians hence-

forth carried into battle a saint's banner, by the thirteenth cen- | tury invariably emblazoned with the winged lion of Saint Mark.*° Wherever they appeared in Christendom, the banners

of saints were initially religious symbols, “pledges of divine protection and victory” that implied no legal privileges or enfeoffment but indicated that a holy war had been declared. They became the exclusive privilege of the bishop or abbot charged with the particular saint’s church, and the investiture of asaint’s banner elevated the pursuit of warfare above the petty level of a struggle for worldly power. The ritual manifestation of an attachment to the saint, therefore, was more important than the standard itself. Venetian doges frequently received banners before embarking on military missions; in fact Pope Calixtus II _ bestowed the vexillum beati Petri on the doge for the crusade of 1122.°° Before a campaign in later centuries, when doges

, superintended a bureaucracy rather than an army, the patriarch invested a banner of Saint Mark on the doge, who in turn transferred it to the newly elected captain general. In the ducal processions there were four different colors of

trionfi banners: white stood for peace, red for war, dark blue for a league, and violet for a truce; the current state of Venetian military affairs determined which color was carried first. The 35 Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 88-91; Carl Erdmann, The Origin of the Idea of Crusade, pp. 35—47; Percy Ernst Schramm, Herrschaftszeichen und Staatssymbolik, p. 860. 36 Erdmann, Idea of Crusade, pp. 51-52, 186-87.

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banners continued to serve as a religious sanction for war or, as

a matter of fact, for whatever situation the Venetians found themselves in; but by the late sixteenth century the banners’ importance extended considerably beyond a straightforward sign of saintly favor. Francesco Sansovino explained that for his

contemporaries the standards demonstrated that the rulers of Venice were absolute and unrestrained by any worldly power.*’ So again a ducal symbol was transformed to serve as an insigne of sovereignty. The Alexandrine gifts constituted a symbolic complex that expressed the religious and political doctrines most important

to the Venetian community. The trionfi not only symbolized Venice's dedication to the Papacy, the doge’s status as a prince equal to popes and emperors, Saint Mark’s protection of Venetian military conquests, and the Venetian espousal of the principles of justice, but also, by means of the legend, proclaimed to the world that a pope had recognized and praised these traits.

The Alexander legend so permeated Venetian culture that it was accepted as the single most important source for civic feasts, ceremonies, and symbols. On Thursday of Holy Week, for example, the doge and his closest retainers were rowed in the ducal piatti to San Giacomo di Rialto (see map) to enjoy the

indulgence granted by Pope Alexander, as tradition held, to those who visited the church on that day.?* Again, on April 3,

the doge and magistrates went to Santa Maria della Carita in , pursuit of an Alexandrine indulgence.*®? The candle the doge lighted for Saint Mark on his feast day was reputedly a donation

of Pope Alexander.*® Finally, Alexander's most famous and ! richly symbolic gift, the ring and the right to marry the sea, became the centerpiece of a great communal ritual that, more 37 “Significano parimente Imperio assoluto senza alcuna superiorita.” Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 321v. 38 MCV, MS Venier, P.D. 517b, under heading “Settimana Santa” ; Sanso-

vino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 348v; 1663, pp. 519-20; and Doglioni, Le cose notabili, pp. 72—73. 39 MCV, MS Venier, P.D., 517b, under heading “Aprile”; Doglioni, Le cose notabili, p. 47; Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 1:305—29.

40 Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, p. 507; Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 90; ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 8v; BMV, MS Latin I, 172 (2276), fol. 53r.

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Venetians. , |

than anything else, pronounced the imperial designs of the | THE MARRIAGE OF THE SEA

_ The most telling metaphor for Venetian dominion was a sexual one. A city so immersed in fertility ritual, so concerned with cosmetic appearances, was bound to take advantage of the most

seductive imagery. The marriage between the city and the sea | propagated just that. This marital image has been preserved in the romantic memory of a Venice now lost.

| Once did She hold the gorgeous east in fee; And was the safeguard of the west: the worth

Of Venice, the eldest Child of Liberty. } She was a maiden City, bright and free;

No guile seduced, no force could violate; | , And when she took unto herself a Mate, She must espouse the everlasting Sea.*’

Wordsworth, unfortunately, had his genders switched; for essential to understanding the marriage is the point that the doge was the husband of a maritime bride, who as the female partner was naturally and legally subject to the male. A ritual blessing of the Adriatic probably dates from Doge

. Pietro I] Orseolo’s expedition to Dalmatia in about the year | : 1000, which first introduced the victory banners and established Venetian control of the northern Adriatic. Orseolo set sail on Ascension Day, and afterward his victories were recalled

every year on that day, when the bishop of Olivolo, accompanied by the doge and citizenry, blessed the sea (a benedictio).” Although this annual blessing may have merely made official a

1000. , 41 William Wordsworth, “On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic,” in

Wordsworth: Poetical Works, ed. Thomas Hutchinson, revised by Ernest De Selincourt, Oxford, 1969, Il. 1-8.

| #2 Michiel, Le Origine delle feste veneziane, 1:169—79; Romanin, Storia documentata di Venezia, 1:281; Urban, “La festa della Sensa,” p. 312; Kanto- | rowicz, Laudes Regiae, p. 147. Dates given for the expedition vary from 997 to

120

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES , rite commonly performed at the beginning of the sailing season in many sea-going communities, the blessing from this time on acquired local political significance as an expression of domin-

ion.*? Orseolo demanded that, in Dalmatian liturgical rites, lauds be sung to the Venetian doge immediately after the acclamation of the Byzantine emperor, an innovation that must have eventually facilitated the transfer of allegiance from Constantinople to Venice.*4 The introduction of the benedictio as an official Venetian ritual occurred at the same time as the adoption of saints’ banners in warfare and ducal lauds in the liturgy, and all three practices had a quasi-imperial connotation. In the mideleventh century, the bishop began to stage the benedictio from San Nicolo al Lido and to add prayers to Saint Nicholas as part of the rite. By 1267, when Martin da Canal described the ceremony, a desponsatio, or matrimonial covenant, between the doge and the sea had been grafted onto the benedictio, creating

a composite rite and establishing the rudiments for the marriage of the sea, or the Sensa festival.* This significant transformation was probably a response to the heightened concern for Venice's own imperial image that followed the conquest of

Constantinople in 1204. As the new lord of “a quarter and half | a quarter” of the Byzantine Empire, the doge required a proper ritual manifestation of his newly acquired dominion, and the marriage of the sea constituted the quintessential imperial rite. In the thirteenth century there remained a vague aura of pa-

ganism about the Sensa rites since they seemed, despite the Christian elements, to resemble too closely a sacrifice to Neptune; Salimbene de Adam, in fact, explained the marriage as an ancient idolatry.*® The Ascension rites came to be the center of #3 Cf. Fasoli, “Liturgia e cerimoniale ducale,” p. 274.

44 Kantorowicz, Laudes Regiae, pp. 147—51. | 45 “Ft li prestre qu’ est aveuc monsignor li dus beneist l’eive et monsignor li dus gete dedens la mer un anel d’or.” Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 250. Cf.

Urban, “La festa della Sensa,” pp. 312-14. 46 “Simili modo [the previous passage described the gold rose the Pope gave each year] dux Veneciarum cum Venetis suis cum anulo aureo in die Ascensionis Domini mare desponsat, partim causa solatii et deductionis, partim ex - quadam ydolatrie consuetudine motus, qua Neptuno sacrificant Veneti, partim ad ostendendum quod Veneti dominium maris habent. Postea piscatores qui

, volunt (quia aliter non coguntur) denudant se, et aleo pleno ore, quod postea

121 |

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

a vast spring festival complete with public entertainments, a fifteen-day fair, and an Alexandrine indulgence given visitors to San Marco. Large, often unruly crowds of foreigners came to Venice for the occasion, and by the sixteenth and seventeenth

centuries the Sensa festival inaugurated the theater season, , which lasted until July.4” One can be certain, therefore, that thousands witnessed the ritual every year.

In the sixteenth century the marriage of the sea was the ~ carefully orchestrated apogee of the state liturgy. At dawn on Ascension Day the doge’s cavalier in charge of ceremonial prep-

arations determined whether the sea was calm emough for a procession of boats; if it was, he obtained the ceremonial ring

(the vera) from the officials of the Rason Vecchie and announced the beginning of the Sensa.*® After mass was sung in San Marco the doge, high magistrates, and foreign ambassadors boarded the Bucintoro, the doge’s ceremonial galley decorated with figures of Justice and the insignia of the republic. As they were rowed out onto the lagoon (see map), the chapel choir of San Marco sang motets, and the bells of the churches and monasteries under the patronage of the doge began ringing.*® Near the convent of Sant’ Elena, the patriarch of Castello, in his flatboat (piatto) bedecked with banners, joined the procession of vessels, which usually included thousands of gaily adorned prispargunt, descendunt in profundum maris ad anulum inquirendum. Et quic-

_ umque illum invenire potest, absque ulla contradictione possidet illum. De hac materia dicit Psalmista: Qui descendunt mare in navibus, facientes operationem in aquis multis, ipsi viderunt opera Domini et mirabilia eius in profundo [italics in original]. Et nota quod Neptunus a poetis et gentilibus dicitur deus maris.” Salimbene de Adam, Cronica, pp. 822—23. The passage is dated 1285. 47 Urban, “La festa della Sensa,” pp. 330-41. For an example of jousts held

during the Sensa festival of 1497 see Sanuto, I diarii, 1:614. On the theater season see Girolamo Priuli, “Diario,” Osterreichische Nationalbibliothek, Vienna, ex Foscarini Cod. 6229, b. 3, fol. 307v. A microfilm copy of this MS is on deposit in the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, Venice. 48 Cerimoniale solenne nel giorno dell’ascensione per lo sposalizio del mare che compivasi al doge di Venezia tratto dal codice inedito che serviva di norma all'ultimo cavaliere del doge, pp. 9, 12.

*9 The best discussion of the history and décor of the Bucintoro is in Urban, ,

Cicogna 2991/1.20, fol. 3r. : “La festa della Sensa,” pp. 317-29. On the bell ringing see MCV, Cod.

122

IMPERIAL PREROGATIVES

vate gondolas, barges hired by the guilds, pilot boats (peote) fitted out by companies of young noblemen, and galleys manned

by sailors from the Arsenal. The religious rites of benedictio took place on the patriarch’s boat: two canons began by singing, “Hear us with favor, O Lord,” to which the patriarch answered three times, “We worthily entreat Thee to grant that this sea be tranquil and quiet for our men and all others who sail upon it, O hear us”; the patriarch blessed the waters, and the canons sang an Oremus. The patriarchical boat then approached the ducal Bucintoro, from which the primicerio, the head priest of San Marco, thrice intoned, “Sprinkle me, Lord, with hyssop and marjoram.” Next, while his boat circled the Bucintoro, the

patriarch blessed the doge with holy water, using an olive branch as an aspergillum.°® When the party reached the mouth of the lagoon, the place where a break in the Lido opened Venice to the Adriatic, the actual marriage ceremony took place. At a

signal from the doge the patriarch emptied a huge ampulla (mastellus) of holy water into the sea, and the doge, in turn, dropped his gold ring overboard saying, “We espouse thee, O sea, as a sign of true and perpetual dominion.”*’ After the marriage ceremony the doge and his guests stopped at San Nicolo al Lido for prayers and a banquet that lasted until evening, others returned to feast at home, and the pilgrim and merchant galleys bound for the East, the first of the season, 5° “Fyaudi nos, Domine, cum propiciis” ; “Ut hoc mare nobis et omnibus in eo navigantibus tranquillum et quietum concedere digneris te rogamus, audi nos”; “Asperges me, Domine, ysopo et mundabar.” Urban, “La festa della Sensa,” pp. 314—15. Cf. ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 8v; BMV, MS Latin WI, 172 (2276), fol. 53r—v; Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, pp. 500-502. Urban, p. 315, says that the patriarch climbed aboard the Bucintoro to bless the doge. The official ceremonial book, however, reads, “movens se cum navicula sua, quae ad latus dextrum steterat Bucentauri, circuit navem ipsam Ducalem, spargendo in D. Ducem, et omnes aquam benedictam.” ASV, Collegio

Cerimoniale 1, fol. 8v. |

51 “Desponsamus te Mare, in signum veri perpetuique dominii.” Sansovino, Venetia, 1663, p. 501. Cf. Michiel, Le origine delle feste veneziane, 1:187. In other sources, however, there is no mention of the phrase, “Desponsamus te Mare.” ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 8v. Cf. Urban, “La festa della Sensa,” p. 315.

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‘thirteenth-century description of the ducal procession, both nobles and citizens walked in an undifferentiated crowd behind the doge;*® but after the so-called closing of the Great Council in 1297, an act that defined the political rights and membership

of the ruling patriciate, class differentiation became increasingly important to Venetians, and it was eventually reflected in the arrangement of the ducal procession.?’ Important to Contarinis explanation of Venetian class harmony was the doctrine that the special dignities granted to the cittadini compensated for their lack of formal political power, and the most conspicuous of these dignities was the position of the cittadini officials in the ducal procession.”® In an age that perceived processional rankings and ceremonial precedence as authentic indicators of

social realities, Contarini’s views made good sense. Perhaps most influential, then, in producing the Renaissance myth of Venice was the appearance of the ducal procession, which suggested both a broad social participation in the government and a general acceptance of it, an appearance that contrasted with the princely and courtly image of most other states. The last segment of the procession consisted of a ranking of noble magistrates that descended from the ducal counselors and procurators of San Marco to the members of the Senate. The processional rankings corresponded rather closely to both the legal distribution of authority and the positions of actual power within Venetian government. Under law the head of state in

the absence of the doge was the group of magistrates in the 7° “Ft apres monsignor li dus s’en vont les gentis homes de Venise, et maint preudomes dou peuple.” Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. 246; in the 1845 ed. see pp. 560 and 741, n. 287. In the 1204 mosaics in Saint Clement’s chapel in

San Marco, the only differentiation is among “pontifices, clerus, populus, dux.” Schramm, Herrschaftszeichen und Staatssymbolik, p. 866.

27 Lane, “The Enlargement of the Great Council.” Cf. Stanley Chojnacki, “In Search of the Venetian Patriciate.” *8 Contarini is not entirely consistent on the importance of class differentiation in Venice. Although he emphasizes the compensations given to the cittadini in many passages, in one place he seems to deny that Venice had a class structure at all: “The Venetians will not allow among their citizens any other difference, then [sic] only of age, because from thence never sprang any sedition or contention!” De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, English version, p. 34. For an example of the manifold ceremonial distinctions made according to age in Venice see ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 93v.

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A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS Signoria, and consequently these officials followed closely behind the doge, ambassadors, and ducal symbols.”° The inner circle of oligarchs who wielded most of the power in Venice consisted of the doge, his six counselors, the procurators of San

Marco, the savii grandi, the members of the Council of Ten (and until 1583 the members of the Zonta of the Ten), and the five resident ambassadors posted to Rome, Vienna, Madrid, Paris, and Constantinople.*° Thus, of the first nine processional ranks after the doge’s sword-bearer, members of the inner po-

litical circle held five; the other four positions went to senior | judicial officials and to the family of the doge. The podesta or capitano del terraferma or del mar who carried the doge’s sword was probably a member of this ruling oligarchy as well. The participation of the Senate contingent, which consisted of sixty regular and sixty supplementary (Zonta) members or of some portion of the senators, was optional and depended on the degree of pomp called for by the occasion.*’ The Senate, as the *9 Definitions of the Signoria: “La Seigneurie de Venise se peult entendre par troys manieres: la premiere est que la Seigneurie de Venise est entendue pour toute la chose publique de Venise et pour tout l’estat des Venissiens; la 2° est que la Seigneurie de Venise est entendue pour tout le colliege duquel se traicte de present; la 3° est que la Seigneurie de Venise est entendue seulement pour le Duc et ses conseillers et chefz de Quarante.” Traité du gouvernement, p. 272.

°° There were about thirty members of this inner circle. Grendler, The , Roman Inquisition, p. 43, and Lowry, “Reform of the Council,” pp. 307-10. Lane defines the inner circle as consisting of “. . . the sixteen men holding the positions of doge, Ducal Councillors, Savii Grandi, and Chiefs of the Ten.

... The rest of the Ten, the Savii di Terra Ferma, the three Heads of the , Forty, and the three State Attorneys [avogadori di comun] were on the outer edge of the inner circle.” Venice, pp. 256—57. James Davis adds to these lists “the governers of the leading cities and islands, the members of a few principal Senate committees, and a few naval offices.” This meant that there were sixty essential posts to be filled at any one time. “Adding to these another forty men who might have been temporarily inactive because their terms of office had expired, or they were sick, traveling, or attending to business affairs, the total goes up to about 100.” The Decline of the Venetian Nobility, p. 23. *! For evidence of the grand chancellor inviting the senators to a procession see Sanuto, ! diarii, 24:173. Since nearly all important magistrates were entitled to attend Senate meetings in an ex officio capacity, the Senate could consist

of as many as 220 members. Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Veneto- , rum, p. 63; English version, p. 66. For processions some portion, such as half the Senate and half the Zonta, were obliged to attend. Sanuto, I diarii, 24:637 ; MCV, Cod. Cicogna 2991/117, fol. 7r.

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principal legislative body, included in its number nearly all of , the older, politically successful patricians, so that when the senators walked in a ducal procession, the entire political hierarchy of Venice was presented.”

More than anything else this precise and rigid ranking of magistrates distinguished the Venetian procession. Since at least the fourteenth century the patricians had shown an almost fanatical concern to define the processional rankings and to uphold ceremonial decorum and solemnity.** Such a preoccupation reveals a desire to prevent factional strife by forcing a constitutional mold upon the teeming passions of political life; placing officials into a processional hierarchy implied that the only legitimate way to pursue political power was through elec-

tion to office. In addition, the liturgical context in which processions were formed sanctified this hierarchical arrangement. Pietro Casolo, a Milanese pilgrim returning from the Holy Land who witnessed an All Saints’ Day procession in 1494, observed in its hierarchical precision a reflection of social

and political harmony absent elsewhere. , They all walked two and two, as I said, after the Doge in

perfect order. This is very different from the practices I | have witnessed at many courts, both ecclesiastical and sec~ ular, where the moment the Prince has passed all go pell-

mell (as we say in our tongue a rubo) and without any order. In Venice, both before and behind the Doge, everyone goes in the best order imaginable.* °? “The whole manner of the commonwealths government belongeth to the senate.” Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, p. 65; English version, p. 68. °° For examples see ASV, Maggior Consiglio, deliberazioni, “Libro d’oro,” P. rv, fol. 9r—v (21 July 1327) and fol. 202r—v (19 April 1355); ASV, Consiglio dei Dieci, miscellanea cod. 1, “Magnus,” p. 40 (16 December 1377). °4 “Dreto al Duce con uno ordine contrario a li ordini de molti corti ho veduto io, et ecclesiastiche e mondane, le quali subito sii passato el principe vanno catervatim e senz’altro ordine (se dice in lingua nostra vanno a rubo [he was Milanese]), e quivi inante e dreto si si va tanto ordinatamente quanto si possa dire.” Casolo, Viaggio a Gerusalemme, p. 108; in English translation, p.

338. Good order in processions was not as peculiarly Venetian as Casolo thought. Several Florentine propitiatory processions were described as eminating from God and miraculous because of the perfect order displayed in them. Trexler, “Ritual Behavior,” p. 144, n. 77.

| 201 A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS

| In their public tacade, at least, the Venetians were able to con-

vince themselves and some others that Venice was a city of singular serenity, as free from class strife and political turmoil

as the processions seemed to be free from disorder and disobe- | dience.

Casolo’s testimony about the near-miraculous good order of the Venetian procession he witnessed can be rebutted, however, with numerous incidents recorded in Venetian sources of turmoil, laxity, and even disinterest. The Scuole Grandi members _ were notorious for joining processions late, often in improper attire, and for involving themselves in shoving matches over precedence with the batuti of other Scuole.*” On one embarrassing occasion the Carita showed up for a celebratory procession mistakenly carrying the arms of the Holy League rather than those of France.*® Friars, monks, priests, and even the

patriarch were no better, and the government was frequently | called upon to resolve conflicts and confirm the rules of priority among the ecclesiastics.” Political rivalries, personal jealousies, and perhaps sincere ideological differences over the proper hi35 Sanuto, / diarii, 11:679, 27:193 ; MCV, Cod. Cicogna, 2991/13—14, fol.

7r; ASV, Inquisitori et revisori sopra le Scuole Grandi, capitolare 1, fols. 8v—9r, 25r—27v, 33r—v, 78v—79v, 83v— 84v, 116v. The Inquisitori records are cited extensively in Pullan, Rich and Poor in Venice, pp. 52ff, 82ff. The maestro

di coro of San Marco organized the ecclesiastics and Scuole Grandi members who arrived late to a procession according to this rule of precedence: “Ordi_nate, si inferiores primi; maiores vero postremi.” BMV, MS Latin 11, 172 (2276), fol. 17r. 8° “Te scuole e mal ad ordine, et quela di la Carita havia arme de la liga et non di Franza, che fo notado da mi, cosa che non dovevano far.” Sanuto, I diarti, 53:312. 37 An act in 1502 established the processional placement of the religious groups. Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 339r—v. Supplemental legislation reveals, however, that problems recurred throughout the sixteenth century. A dispute between the Observant and Conventual Franciscans had to be resolved

in 1517. Sanuto, I diarii, 24:476—77. In 1522 and 1530 further controversies | required the re-enactment of a law that cited the precedents established by a 1319 decree. MCV, Cod. Cicogna, 2991/17, fols. Ir—2v. In 1553 a system of rotation was established for the nine congregations of priests. BMV, MS Latin ml, 172 (2276), fol. 55r. In 1575, when the patriarch was invited to the funeral of a grand chancellor, the patriarch said he would come, but asked the Signoria to determine his seating position in advance to avoid struggles over precedence. ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 45v.

202

A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS erarchy of offices fueled passionate arguments over the proper processional arrangement of the noble magistrates; as anyone familiar with the behavior in Renaissance courts knows, ceremonial rankings were matters of great political and often personal concern.*®

Despite these recurring infractions, the Venetians chose not

to follow the solution invented for King Arthur when the Round Table eliminated combats for pride of place among his knights, but instead to pursue ever more single-mindedly the hierarchical organization of society as dictated by the leaders of

the patrician regime. Evidence of disputes over precedence might be interpreted in two ways: either they signify an underlying political turmoil that contradicted the serenity of the processional image, or they reveal not so much a lack of concern for the image of the republic as the overwhelming importance Renaissance Venetians granted the concept of ceremonial primacy. There undoubtedly was political conflict in Venice; but it

is most important that such conflict occurred within an established ceremonial and institutional context, so that political and social ambition found expression in the pursuit of office or perhaps in the redefinition of an office already held, but not in the overt repudiation of the hierarchical conception of society. In addition, the recurring governmental efforts during the sixteenth century to enforce order through legislation, decree, and arbitration of disputes disclose the growing willingness of the ruling elite to use the apparatus of government still more effectively to extend its authority and to promulgate its idea of the proper arrangement of the commonwealth. The contentious attitude of some Scuole Grandi members toward ceremonial behavior may not be so much an indication of their repudiation of the republic or their indifference to it— Venetians after all were as human as anyone else and as prone to laziness and

selfishness as others—as it is of the sometimes monomaniacal | | concern of the regime to eliminate all sources of scandal, to “38 For examples of such disputes see Sanuto, | diarii, 34:239; MCV, Ms Venier, P.D. 517b, under heading “Decembre” ; MCV, Cod. Cicogna, 2991/1

8 fol. 4r, For an example of the nobles’ indifference to a proper show of

respect for the marquis of Mantua see Sanuto, | diarii, 24:268, 292-94.

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A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS control, to order, and to regiment.

In the middle of the procession walked the doge. Before him , the cittadini civil servants ranked themselves in an ascending order of prestige, from the beginning of the procession to the grand chancellor; after him the noble magistrates walked in a

| descending order of status. Hierarchies of rank thus moved inward, from the periphery to the center. In many of the processions discussed by anthropologists, the most important _ elements appear in the middle; the core of meaning and the center of society are at the heart of the procession.*” At each side of the doge, accompanying him as equals, were ambassadors, who legally stood in place of their own sovereigns and

spoke their princes’ wills. The processional nucleus symbolized sovereignty, and a Venetian conception of sovereignty at that,

for the doge, in accord with the legend of the gifts of Pope Alexander III, walked in equality with representatives of the pope and emperor; and from the doge, the sovereign font, all authority flowed, coursing its way down through the hierarchy of assembled magistrates. A comparison of Venetian with Florentine processions is illuminating. In both cities processions displayed the political and

ecclesiastical order according to a fixed linear ranking, they : revealed an evident age and sex differentiation (although in Venice women appeared in processions far less frequently than

in Florence), and they relied on the same organizational principles for both propitiatory and celebratory functions. In Ven‘ice, however, there was a far more rigid separation of the classes than was evident in Florence, and in the Florentine procession no individual similar to the doge became the visual, ceremonial, and structural center of the procession. In Venice the doge and assembled magistrates were the essence of the procession, and their pre-eminence reveals its overwhelmingly political nature; without the doge the entire character of the procession would

have been transmuted from a full-fledged assembly of the Venetian social order to a mere collection of clerics and a congregation. The Florentines in their processions treated the Sig39 Cf. Geertz, “Centers, Kings, and Charisma,” p. 159, and Dundes and Falassi, La Terra in Piazza, p. 105.

204

A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS noria—the representatives of the political establishment —as if it were a sacred object, a living votive image perhaps; but it was still a mere adjunct to the procession, fetched from the Palazzo

Vecchio as if it were some relic picked up when the cortege passed a shrine. Although both Florentine and Venetian processions recognized the sacredness of secular authorities and did much to establish a political theology consonant with their re-

publican traditions, the doge provided the Venetians with a mystical and holy image that was no mere relic, but a living being who had been elected and made sacred through the political system.*° Without a doge, the Florentines tended to search in various places for a sacred central symbol; at different times adolescents, miraculous images, a range of charismatic or fashionable clerics, and eventually the Medici fed the Florentines’

appetite. The Venetians, on the other hand, seemed satisfied with their traditional doge. In such deep structural differences one begins to see the foundations for the contrasting destinies of the two great Renaissance republics. In addition to officials the procession displayed the ducal

trionfi, which were scattered through the first part of the procession and grouped around the doge at the core. Regarding

the trionfi Sansovino remarked, “When walking in triumph and with solemnity [the doge] carries with him, among others, seven things worthy of consideration, which show us his preeminence. These things he received from the first princes of the world, that is, from the popes and emperors.”*! These seven 4° On Florentine processions see Trexler, “Ritual Behavior,” especially pp.

132~—33, and idem, “Ritual in Florence: Adolescence,” especially pp. 233, 262. Members of the Genoese alberghi —the great family clans— required household retainers and kinsmen to appear assembled together, bearing the arms and insignia of the clan as proof of group strength, when-

ever a ceremony brought notables together in the presence of the doge. Jacques Heers, Family Clans in the Middle Ages, p. 226. No such ceremonial representation of clans occurred in Venetian ritual. The only exception might be at the dogaressa’s coronation, but then only the doge’s and dogaressa’s families had opportunities for public display. 41 “Andando adunque in trionfo, & con solennita, porta con lui fra l’altre, sette cose degne di consideratione, & dimerstratrici della sua molta eccellenza. Le quali egli hebbe da i primi Prencipi del mondo, cioe da i Pontefici, & da gli Imperatori.” Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 321r—v.

205

A REPUBLIC OF PROCESSIONS | trionfi—the banners, musical instruments, candle, cushion, faldstool, umbrella, and sword—were closely identified with the ducal office, and most of them had no significance when separated from it. If a doge were unable to participate in a scheduled procession because of illness or some other cause, the candle, cushion, seat, and umbrella were not displayed; if either the doge or the giudice del proprio were absent, the sword was not carried. When the doge was not present and his place taken by the vice-doge (one of the ducal counselors), only the eight standards and the musical instruments, those symbols carried

at the beginning of the procession at some distance from the doge, appeared.** Except for the instruments, to which the Venetians attached no special significance, and the banners, under which any Venetian commander fought, the trionfi symbolized attributes of the doge’s authority. As we saw in chapter three, all of the trionfi except the faldstool and cushion were interpreted in light of the legend of the donation of Pope Alexander III and understood to signify Venice’ devotion to the Roman Church, the doge’s rank as a prince equal to popes and emperors, Saint Mark’s patronage of Venetian soldiers, and the government’ dedication to the principles of justice (a principle echoed by the presence of the commanders in the first part of the procession). The ducal office was the repository of these

gifts and the institutional link between present politics and distinguished deeds of the past. _ Although the faldstool and cushion were not usually included ‘among the gifts of Pope Alexander, they were given a similar interpretation.** Like the sword, both were probably derived from the insignia of Byzantine officialdom and appeared in Ven*” ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 9V; BMV, MS Latin 1, 172 (2276), fol. 54r; MCV, MS Venier, P.D. 517b, under heading “avertimenti generali” and “Primo giorno di quadragesima”; for examples of doges absent from processions see Sanuto, I diarti, 14:145, 157; 18:372; 20:141. In contrast to the interpretation offered here—that the standards were military insignia associated with the doge or with any other military captain —Staale SindingLarsen identifies the banners as signs of the presence of the Signoria. Christ in the Council Hall, p. 165. *° Sansovino added the faldstool to the list of papal gifts. Venetia, 1604, fol. 322v. Bardi depicts a scene where Pope Alexander III gave Doge Ziani a “seat” and golden gloves. Dichiaratione di tutte le istorie, fol. 39r.

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ice at least as early as the tenth century. In the sixteenth cen-

tury Sansovino claimed that the faldstool or throne indicated | the stability, steadfastness (fermezza), dignity, and pre-eminence of the ducal authority, and it reminded the popolani of the respect they owed to their lord —when the prince was seated

the subject stood. The foot cushion, Sansovino remarked, implied a state of repose, a fit symbol for the peacefulness of life under the ducal republic. **

Between the squires who held the faldstool and cushion walked the ballotino, who was not actually an office-holder but a living symbol for the impartial electoral system that elevated

the doge and all other magistrates. His office began when he was a young boy, supposedly free of political ambition, and he was responsible for drawing ballots out of the electoral urns during the meetings of the Great Council. The choice of a young boy to represent the entire electoral process suggests that Venetians saw youth as an untainted state, a period of innocence from which the society as a whole could draw a continually renewed guarantee that elections would be carried on without corruption. With the display of the ballotino, Venetian adults borrowed virtue from youth, and this virtue was turned toward a specific political end—an act which compares, interestingly enough, with Savonarola’s use of a youth corps to refresh the morals of Florentine society.* The participation of youths in the ducal procession dated from at least the thirteenth

century, for Martin da Canal reported that youths carried the ducal umbrella, faldstool, and cushion; but there seems to have been no necessary connotation of youthful innocence then, as there was with the ballotino in the sixteenth century.*® The ballotino, walking between the faldstool- and cushion-bearing squires, centered, as it were, the symbolic triad, which heralded the princely dignity, electoral honesty, and peacefulness of the Venetian polity. ** Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 322r; Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 82-83; Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, p. 63. * Trexler, “Ritual in Florence: Adolescence.” 46 “Si vait aprés lui un damoisau qui porte une unbrele de dras a or sur son chief, et devant lui porte un damoisau un faudestoire mult biau et un autre damoisau porte un coissin covert de dras a or: et toutevoie vait aprés lui s’espee et la porte un gentil home.” Canal, Les estgires de Venise, pp. 6-8.

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| The final objects of symbolic value in the procession were the doge’s head-gear, consisting of his crown, the corno or berretta,

and his white linen skull-cap, the camauro. The doge wore his | corno for all ceremonial occasions, and in the Holy Week processions a squire carried a bejewelled coronation crown on a gold platter.*” The doge’s embroidered crown probably derived from either the skiadion worn by Byzantine dignitaries or the

imperial kamelaukion used in Constantinople after the ninth , century. By the time of Doge Jacopo Tiepolo (1229-49), when the crown’ characteristic peak appeared, the corno had become the principal insigne of the dogeship, and it specifically con-

noted Venetian independence from the Byzantine Empire. Venetians consciously imitated Byzantine fashions, especially during the period after the Latin conquest of Constantinople in 1204, as a means of establishing their own imperial iconography and bruiting their own recently enhanced authority.** The

camauro appeared in Venice also during the late thirteenth century; but it was not at first considered to be a particular attribute of the doge, for it was worn by numerous officials. By the fifteenth century, however, it had become a ducal symbol with which the doges were invested at their coronations. The doges were not anointed at their coronations; yet Sansovino reported that the skull-cap reminded men of the holy oil with which Christian kings were consecrated at their coronations, and he added that the camauro resembled the fascia used

by ancient kings as a crown.** For his interpretation Sansovino apparently borrowed more from the political theories and coronation practices current in Western Europe in his time than from a distinctly Venetian tradition; in the West the central 47 Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 315v; the crown on a platter can be seen in the engraving by Matteo Pagan (plate 7 herein). *8 Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 83-86; Schramm, Herrschaftszeichen und Staatssymbolik, p. 865; Fasoli, “Liturgia e cerimoniale ducale,” p. 272; M. J. Armingaud, Venise et le Bas-Empire, pp. 311, 433. Venetian imitation of Byzantine fashions during the thirteenth century is discussed at length in Demus, The Church of San Marco, passim. *9 The camauro was “. . . quasi come insegna di persona sacra, rappresentandosi con quella, una certa memoria del santo olio, col quale s‘ungono alcuni Re Christiani, non altrimenti che se questo Prencipe fosse uno del corpo loro.” Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 315v. Cf. Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 86-87.

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feature of an inauguration was the king's anointment, which sanctified the monarch, delineated the strict separation of his kingship from his mortal personality, and transformed government into a mysterium administered by a king-highpriest. The sovereign’s acts, according to this theory of royal “pontificalism,” were divinely ordained and justified. But as Mediterranean peoples, Venetians were unlikely to value olive oil as did northern Europeans, for whom the olive was a luxury whose very scarceness gave it a charismatic value; so in Venice such oil never became a “natural symbol,” nor was it ever associated

with the divine sanction of political authority as it was in the north.*> Among the northern monarchies, crowns were often interpreted as symbols that recalled the act of anointment, and in this sense the crown bestowed on its wearer a holy dignity ;”’ it was probably this idea, alien though it was to Venetian ritual, that Sansovino borrowed to explain the doge’s camauro. The fact that he did so reveals, it would seem, that by the sixteenth century Venetian symbolic forms had been severed completely from their Byzantine roots and interpreted in a new way. Mean-

ing was in the mind of the beholder, and the beholders had changed.

Besides the six canons of San Marco, who served the doge’s sacramental needs in the basilica, the sole ecclesiastic to appear

in the ducal procession was the patriarch, and he was invited only for Holy Week and a few other major feasts.°” The patriarch was always a member of one of the most distinguished patrician families and was thus a prominent Venetian, not a foreign representative of the Church of Rome. He walked, how-

ever, next to the bearer of the white candle, the symbol of Venice's adherence to the true faith, and among the cittadini who preceded the doge, rather than among the patrician officeholders. The canons and patriarch were included not so much because they were exalted ecclesiastics, men of rank comparable °° Kantorowicz, “Mysteries of State”; Janet L. Nelson, “Symbols in Context,” pp. 108—110, 118-19. Cf. Douglas, Natural Symbols.

| °' Bak, “Medieval Symbology of the State,” p. 62. 2 The occasions when the six canons and the patriarch were invited to participate in the procession are listed in BMV, MS Latin 11, 172 (2276). The relevant passage is published in the introduction to Canal, Les estoires de Venise, p. CCCXxiil.

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| to the ambassadors or senators, but because they celebrated the liturgical rites at the end of the procession and because the government wished its piety ever advertised. Sansovino reported that the canons were included “”. . . because it has al-

ways been the custom of this Most Christian Republic to couple _ temporal things with religion.”** The canons marched less as oftice-holders, men who occupied a niche in the hierarchy, than

as symbols, much like the ballotino, of certain values with which the government wished to be identified. Since the doge

had been linked to the cult of Saint Mark for so long, it is unlikely that the Venetian procession was ever exclusively ecclesiastical; at any rate, by the sixteenth century the political dimension of the processional arrangement was clearly ascen-

dant over the ecclesiastical. , The ducal procession usually began at the Ducal Palace, wove

around the periphery of Piazza San Marco, and ended in the |

basilica. On occasion the paraders went afterward on foot or by | boat to another site, usually a church, for a special commemo- | ration, but the normal ritual territory was the centrally located Piazza (see map). Piazza San Marco was, in fact, enlarged and embellished at various times to be more suitable for processions, thereby showing both the power of the republic to redesign the cityscape to suit its own purposes and the central importance of the ducal procession in Venetian public life. The procession, with its display of ducal authority and of the hierarchical order of the republic, visually and physically linked the “government palace with Saint Mark’s tomb and, depending on

the occasion, with other cult centers. The Venetian conception | of ritual space was perhaps unusually dramatic—the splendor of the Piazza remains unmatched—but it was not without parallel. In numerous societies the ritual topography, the spatial distribution of sacred sites, coexists with the centers of political power.”* In Venice the primary religious and political sites were

_ spatially contiguous and, by means of the procession, ritually integrated. As indicated by the demise of the Festival of the

Marys in 1379 and the concern of Doge Gritti in the 1520s and | 1530s for refurbishing the Piazza, from the fourteenth to six53 Sansovino, Venetia, 1604, fol. 330v.

°* Turner, “The Center Out There,” p. 206.

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covered with lighted candles, was usually erected above the casket. ASV, . Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 54v. The baldachin was probably an imitation of | the apotheosis funeral of Charles V, but without the same significance. Francis Yates, “Charles quint et l’idée d’empire.” “8 Sanuto, I diarii, 30:400.

277

THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE | visual link between the dead individual and his earthly status | as doge; on several of the tombs of his fifteenth-century predecessors, a marble effigy of the doge dressed in his full ducal garb lies atop the sepulcher, and on the monument designed by Pietro Lombardo for Doge Pietro Mocenigo the doge stands as a warrior-hero beneath a triumphal arch. Whatever the reason, the simple grave lacked any visual image of Loredan’s status in life as a doge.

Within a day or two of the doge’s death, the Great Council | was called to elect the inquisitors of the dead doge and the correctors of the promissione ducale and to draw lots to determine the ducal electors. As in the case of Agostino Barbarigo, the inquisitors found fault in the conduct of Leonardo Loredan

and charged his heirs 1,500 ducats, but this time because he had not upheld the dignity of his office with the proper majesty and magnificence.’ Although the Senate appropriated 3,500 ducats per year to be spent for ducal pomp, the doge was expected to add a considerable personal outlay in order to uphold an exalted ducal bearing.8° Where Doge Barbarigo had been too liberal, Loredan had been too sparing; doges in general had to follow a narrow path, which was by no means clearly defined

in the early sixteenth century, between indecorous frugality

the ideal course. | | and inappropriate splendor; and they were constantly subject to contrary political pressures that tempted or forced them from

The investigations and fines following these two dogeships expose an attempt by the controlling families of the patriciate to redefine the boundaries of ducal power without destroying the impressive features of the figurehead. After consulting spe-

cialized commercial, administrative, and legal officials about the promissione ducale for Loredan’s successor, the five correctors rewrote even more precisely the legal prescription of ducal pow-

ers: they enacted provisions directing the doge to preserve, ”? Lewkenor'’s additions in the English version of Contarini, De magistrati-

bus et republica Venetorum, p. 157. The total fine against his estate for all reasons was 2,700 ducats. Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, p. 273. For other accusations against Loredan see Brunetti, “Due dogi sotto inchiesta,” pp. 307-28. 8° Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, p. 45; English version, pp. 44—45.

278 THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

honor, and fairly execute the laws; aid other magistrates; meet frequently with the ducal counselors; supervise the collection

, of taxes; be vigilant in conserving the resources of the lagoon; stimulate operations at the Arsenal; encourage speedy trials; oversee hospitals; fulfill his religious duties; and refuse princely

obeisances.*! By redefining ducal authority, the correctors’ ex- | , aminations of the dogeships of Agostino Barbarigo and Leonardo Loredan helped to preserve and strengthen Venice as a republic at a time when, elsewhere in Italy, princes were ignor__ ing or subverting representative and legislative institutions.

) These early sixteenth-century reforms were paradigmatic, but they did not, of course, end all clashes between ducal and republican principles. There were some rather nervous adjustments of ducal imagery in the arts throughout the sixteenth century, and two ducal elections near the turn of the century were particularly troublesome. Wotton’s analysis of the cam-

paigning before Leonardo Dona’ election in 1606 shows that } anxieties about an overbearingly able and ambitious doge were still common in the seventeenth century.

It was notable to hear the arguments that were searched for the exclusion of Donato. His merits were known, his wisdom confessed, and rather indeed amplified than denied

by his adversaries; but great understandings were rather to be wished in Princes that are absolute. They had been

ruled and swayed by his advice . . . though in a private |

condition: what would he do when he should be Prince? The Commonwealth in this fashion might come by little and little to the form of a monarchy: for what difference was there in the effect between being subject to one man’s counsels and to one man’s authority?””

To Wotton, at least, this concern over Dona was prophetic; for some time later, during the papal interdict against Venice, the Englishman described Dona “. . . to be not only the Duke, but the Dictator of the State. . . .”°3 Advocates of a republican Ven81 ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 23r, and Eugenio Musatti, Storia della promissione ducale, pp. 217-18. 82 Smith, Sir Henry Wotton, 1:344. 83 Ibid., p. 354.

279 THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

ice needed more than the interregnum rites to chasten the am-

bitions of a lordly doge. |

Since as early as the ninth century, Venetians had elected their doges in some fashion. A popular assembly (arengo) met on the Lido at San Nicolo to choose the new dux until 1172, when this unwieldy and often violent gathering was replaced

by a committee of first eleven and then, six years later, forty | electors who were probably representatives of the most powerful families. In the mid-thirteenth century the electors added an extra member to their body to prevent ties, thus completing the electoral system that lasted (with a number of minor procedural modifications) until the end of the republic.** The Great Council selected the forty-one electors through a complex system that alternated the drawing of lots with balloting in a naive attempt to keep any one faction from dominating the electoral

committee. While the voting urns were being set up in the Great Council Hall, the ballotino, or voting teller, was “discov-

ered” by a carefully prescribed procedure designed to ensure the selection of someone who was innocent both of political ambition and corruption. According to the law, the youngest of the heads of the Quarantia al Criminale was to walk through the basilica and out the west door; once outside he picked the first boy under fifteen he saw to be the ballotino. The ballotino’s

duties, as we have seen, included drawing lots and ballots

from the voting urns and participating in ducal processions as : _ a symbol of the impartial election system.*° The Great Council | spent several days completing the nine steps necessary to select the forty-one electors of the doge.®® After the electors were ** Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, pp. xii— xv; Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,”

pp. 64-80. 85 Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, p. xvi; ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fols 2v, 5v.

Cf. BMV MS Italiano vil, 142 (7147), fols. 338-39. 8° The selection began with a lottery to choose thirty members of the Great Council, none of whom could be related. The thirty were then reduced by lot to nine; the nine nominated by ballot another group of forty; the forty were reduced again by lot to twelve; the twelve chose by ballot twenty-five; the twenty-five were pared down by lot to nine; the nine elected by ballot fortyfive; the forty-five were eliminated by lot to eleven; and, finally, the eleven chose by ballot the forty-one electors of the doge. Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, pp. XViI— Xx.

280 THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

finally chosen, they were cloistered in the Ducal Palace for the duration of their deliberations and forbidden to leave or to communicate with anyone on the outside. Venetian political panegyrists lauded the mysterious incor-

ruptibility of this system, but their view differed markedly from the realities of electoral politics. Gianmaria Masenetti portrayed faith and justice as directly guiding the forty-one in their deliberations and as preventing the subversion of government by factions.*’ In contrast Wotton, usually the stalwart admirer of things Venetian, described the ducal election as “ . . one of the most intricate and curious forms in the world, consisting of ten several precedent ballotations. Whereupon occurreth a pretty question, what need there was of such a deal of solicitude in choosing a Prince of such limited authority ?”**

Notwithstanding Wotton’s unanswered question, the electoral system became, as we have seen, an important component

in the myth of Venice. Yet, in spite of the complex selection process and elaborate precautions, the conclaves were ridden with factional discord and electoral intrigues; the poorer nobles were often ready to accept gifts from richer, politically ambitious patricians, as happened in one famous seventeenth-cen-

tury case in which more than two hundred patricians were involved in a bribery scandal.®? Furthermore, the forty-one electors, who sometimes met for more than a month, were known to take advantage of their right to provisions at public expense by calling for exotic and costly foods. In the ducal elections, practice contrasted dramatically with ideology, and there were frequent attempts to reduce the burdensome costs of the ducal interim and to modify the electoral system itself.°° A 87 Giammaria Masenetti, Li trionfi et feste solenni che si fanno in la creatione del principe di Vineggia, in ottava rima, in BMV, Misc. 2405/13.

88 Smith, Sir Henry Wotton, 2:136. Wotton continues to conjecture that the system “. . . was (as the tradition runneth) a monk’s invention of the Benedictine order. And in truth the whole mysterious frame therein doth much savour of the cloister.” (pp. 136-37) 8° Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, pp. Xxxv—XxVi.

°° Ibid. “Disposizione e decreti per limitare le spese del Doge (1521—1795),” ASV, Rason Vecchie, busta 219, especially the papers dated 1521, 1624, 1636,

and 1656; also see busta 223, paper dated 1623. |

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supposedly disinterested reform proposed by Alessandro Zorzi in 1585 professed the high aim of putting an end to the scandal, shame, and expenditure occasioned by the procedure then current; he would have had the doge selected entirely by lot and

would have punished electoral tampering by ten years’ banishment.®! Others tried to modify the system to their own advantage. A proposal before the conclave that elected Antonio Grimani in 1521 attempted to bar from candidacy anyone whose son or brother was a priest, a suggestion that would have elim-

inated three of the leading contenders for the ducal throne, who were related to cardinals.®* These schemes involved proce-

dural but not substantive reforms. The ducal election was one ,

of the Venetian political processes most subject to self-interest and factional pressure, and although electoral ceremonies played

| an important and probably vital role in the symbolic display of Venetian political ideology, these ceremonies did not exemplify the virtues of Venetian government as much as the Venetians’ ability to turn politics to a propagandistic purpose. The purpose in this case was to portray Venice as a commune without “politics,” a city in which human decisions bodied forth the eternal

promise, or defeat. , principles of Justice, not the meaner products of dispute, comWHEN THE ELECTORS reached a final decision, the ringing bells of

San Marco announced the election of a new doge, an event the -popolani viewed as cause for celebration; shops closed, bonfires were laid, and revelers fell into drunken parades reminiscent of carnival frolics.°? The official ceremonies of the coronation oc-

"1 MCV, Cod. P.D. 296c, 11, fol. 831r—v. | 2 Sanuto, ! diarii, 30:395; also see cols. 402—6.

*3 During the celebrations held in 1595 after the election of Marin Grimani was announced, a crowd filled Piazza San Marco and ripped up the booths built for the Sensa fair to fuel an enormous bonfire. MCV, Cod. Cicogna

2479, under the heading “Marino Grimani.” Doge Grimani so amply re-

warded the popolani for their support with gifts of wine, bread, and money | that for months after his coronation his mere appearance would bring cries of Viva! from the crowds. BMV, MS Italiano vil, 142 (7147), pp. 339-40. For a copy of a poem celebrating the election see Antonio Pilot, “L’elezione del Doge Marino Grimani.” For the expenses Grimani incurred from his election gifts see G. Giomo, “Le spese del nobil uomo Marino Grimani nella

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curred in three stages, performed in succession on the same day; first, the doge was presented to the community and invested with the banner of Saint Mark in the basilica; second, he was carried around the Piazza while he and his relatives tossed specially minted coins to the crowds; finally, he was crowned at the top of the Scala dei Giganti in the courtyard of the Ducal Palace.” The sixteenth-century coronation ceremonies were primarily

secular, emphasizing the restrictive bonds of the law rather than the mystical consecration of anointment; and they were aristocratic, demonstrating the elective power of the Great Council rather than the approbation of the entire community. Coronations had changed considerably from those of the eleventh century, when the doge, acclaimed by the popular assem_ bly, entered San Marco barefoot, laid himself prostrate on the pavement, and humbly thanked God for his election — or even from those of the thirteenth century, when crowds of popolani tore the new doge’s cloak from his back.®* By temporarily degrading the new doge, his future subjects reversed the social roles to which they would soon be bound. Rites of status reversal such as these frequently appear in ceremonies designed to elevate a person to a higher social status or office, and they tend sua elezione a doge di Venezia.” An unpopular choice could foster demonstrations against the electors, as was the case at the coronation of Andrea Gritti in 1523. Sanuto, | diarti, 34:158—59. For demonstrations against Pasquale Cicogna in 1583 see Mosto, | dogi di Venezia, p. 379. *4 On the ducal coronations in general see Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, pp. xxli— xxxi. For the historical development of the ceremonies see Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, pp. 63—67. Models followed in the sixteenth century are in BMV, MS Latin I, 172 (2276), fol. 70r—v, and ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 4r—v. Of the many extant descriptions of sixteenth-century coronations, the most useful are those of Antonio Grimani in Sanuto, | diarit, 30:479-— 90, 31:7—11, and of Andrea Gritti in 34:155—85; of Francesco Dona in MCV, Cod. P.D. 381, under heading for doge number Lxxxi1; and of Sebastiano Venier in ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fols. 56v—57r.

© Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, pp. 64-65. Cf. Schramm, Herrschaftszeichen und Staatssymbolik, p. 560, and Nelson, “Symbols in Context,” pp. 101-4. For additional examples of early coronations see Canal, Les estoires de Venise, pp. 128-30, 270-309, 362— 64, and Andrea Marini, De pompa ducatus Venetorum. On the Renaissance myth about this early acclamation system see Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, p. 51.

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THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

to brace authoritarian social roles by providing an emotional outlet for those in a subordinate station.® Before the Renaissance redefinition of the ducal powers, the doges were in truth multiplying their own authority when they affected a penitential posture and accepted degradation at the hands of the populace. From the late twelfth century, however, as members of the richest patrician families gradually accumulated power they

eliminated the vestiges of popular election, just as they restricted the powers of the doge. Rites of status reversal and the penitential conduct of the new doge eventually disappeared; by the fifteenth century the final reminder of popular ratification

was erased with the elimination of the phrase, “This is your doge if he pleases you,” which had previously qualified the

, presentation of the doge to the populace.*’ The election was by |

fact. |

then a thoroughly patrician affair as much in appearance as in

Like the other interregnum rites, all sixteenth-century co- :

ronations followed the model created by the dogeship of Leonardo Loredan, during which the legal and ceremonial position

of the doge was clarified.°® The ceremonies began when the |

eldest of the forty-one electors presented the new doge to the | populace from the porphyry pulpit on the right side of the nave of San Marco with these words:

The Most Serene Prince Our Lord Agostino Barbarigo | being dead and our Signoria properly wishing to provide a

successor, has, together with the Senate, elected Our Prince, the Most Serene and Excellent Lord Leonardo Loredan, here present. The virtues and worthy condition of whom are such, that through divine grace he will fervently strive for the good and conservation of the commonweal and of every public, as well as private, interest [and] whose °® Turner, The Ritual Process, pp. 170-71.

} °7 Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, p. xxvi. At the election in 1400 there was some minor pillaging of the private palace of the doge-elect, but this was perhaps the last example of a popular spoliation of the new doge’s property or person. Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, p. xxxvii. °8 For the coronation model see ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 4. For the legislation establishing the coronation ceremony in 1485 see fol. 60r.

284 THE PARADOXICAL PRINCE

assumption signifies joy and consolation to all, so that you acknowledge him your Prince and leader. °°

This was a precise statement of the principle of election. Selected through the authority of the administrative and legislative bodies of the republic, the Signoria and the Senate, the new doge was picked out for his personal virtues (and political connections) rather than for any right of succession, and his election was a fait accompli, since the patrician magistrates no longer bothered to solicit from the populace even informal approval for their decision. After the electors presented the new doge to the people, he descended from the pulpit, walked to the high altar containing

the relics of Saint Mark, knelt, and kissed the altar; then he stood to face the celebrant and with his hand on a missal swore “To conserve the patrimony and ecclesiastical honor of Saint Mark in good faith and without fraud.”!°° With these words the newly elected doge obliged himself to protect the endowments and trusts whose income supported the basilica. There was nothing particularly mystical or sacramental about this; it was simply a legal oath taken as was usual in the Middle Ages, by placing one’s hand on a sacred object in front of witnesses in

a church.

The conferral of a ducal banner, however, introduced into the

rituals the idea that there was an eternal, mystical source for the doge’s authority. The celebrant took one of the eight cere»° “Fssendo defunto el Ser[enissi]mo Principe nostro D[omilno Augustin Barbarigo et volendo opportunamente proveder la Sig[noriJa nostra de successor, ha eletto con el Senato suo in Principe n[ost]ro el Ser[enissi]mo et Eccfel-

lentissilmo D[omil]no Leonardo Loredano qui presente, le virtu del qual, et

degne condittion, mediante la Divina gratia sono tale, che grandemente se | | die spezar el ben, et conservation del stado, et ogni com[mJodita si publica, la qual assontion a letitia, et consolation de tutti ve é significata, accio quello voi recognosciate per principe, et Capo vostro.” ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale

1, fol. 4r. Other copies of this formula, but with slight variations, are recorded for the presentation of Antonio Grimani in Sanuto, I diarii, 30:481, and of Sebastiano Venier in ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 57r. Cf. Sinding-Larsen, Christ inthe Council Hall, p. 203. 09 “Statum et honorem ecclesiam Sancti Marci bona fide, et sine fraude conservare.” ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 4r. Cf. Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, p. 67, and Bascape, “Sigilli della repubblica,” pp. 95-96.

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| monial banners of Saint Mark from the admiral of the Arsenal and gave it to the doge, saying, “We consign on your serenity the banner of Saint Mark as a sign of true and perpetual dogeship,” to which the doge answered, “I accept.”!°' The new doge

completed the rite by personally returning the banner to the |

admiral of the Arsenal. Sansovino wrote that the standards signified an absolute, eternal authority.'° With the consignment of the banner the new doge accepted custody, for the duration of his life, of an undying, perfected authority, which was the source of legitimacy for the entire government. The

rites in San Marco promulgated, as did the breaking of the silver emblems after a doge’s death, the notion that there was a

distinction to be drawn between the eternal authority of the | doge — here symbolized by the banner — and the mortal incum-

bent. In fact, as the similar investiture of the banner on a captain general illustrates, the exercise of this authority was not the exclusive prerogative of the doge.!”

The second stage of the coronation-day ceremonies consisted | of the doge’s procession around Piazza San Marco in front of a | vast crown of popolani. The doge, accompanied by two of his closest relatives and the admiral of the Arsenal (who still held

the banner of Saint Mark), stood on a wooden platform that Arsenal sailors carried on their shoulders around the Piazza. As other sailors broke a path through the crowd, the four men on the platform tossed ducat and half-ducat coins to the crowds,

_ about which Gasparo Contarini reported, “The people be not , negligent in gathering it [the coins] uppe.”!°4 Each doge varied

‘°’ “Consignamus Serenitati vestrae vexillum D. Marci in signum veri et | perpetui ducatus.” Peyer, Stadt und Stadtpatron, p. 67. There is no mention of what was said at the consignment-of-the-banners ceremony in ASV, Collegio Cerimoniale 1, fol. 4r. Cf. Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” p. 90. '* On the early use of the banners in Venice, see Pertusi, “Quedam regalia insignia,” pp. 88—91. '°S There is no indication that the doge was anointed at his coronation. On the significance of anointing at regal or imperial coronations, see Nelson, “Symbols in Context,” pp. 108-110, and D. M. Nicol, “Kaiseralbung.”

104 Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, p. 59; English version, p. 61. At Alvise Mocenigo’s election there were prohibitions against carrying arms, because the numerous soldiers gathered for the Turkish wars might have been tempted to riot. MCV, Cod. Cicogna 2479, under heading

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the amount of money he gave away, depending on his personal resources and on the tolerance of his patrician contemporaries for ducal display: the promissione of Nicolo Marcello (elected 1473) limited him to 100 ducats, and that of Leonardo Dona

(elected 1606) prohibited him from giving more than 200.’ Among the more lavish donors were Andrea Gritti (elected ~ 1523), who tried to offset the unpopularity of his election by

spending 400 ducats, and Marin Grimani (elected 1595), who | rewarded the dedicated support the popolani had given him with ample gifts of money, wine, and bread.'°° Ducal largess was a dangerous custom for the aristocratic republic because it bought personal adulation for the doge, possibly at the expense of loyalty to the republican regime; in the hands of a demagogue like Marin Grimani, who could afford lavish expenditures, the largess rite became another threat to the egalitarian balance of the aristocratic government. The third stage of the ceremonies consisted of the coronation itself, enacted in the open courtyard of the Ducal Palace. First held in 1485 for Doge Marco Barbarigo, Agostino’s predecessor

and brother, the public coronation was an innovation that countered the restrictive elements of the traditional coronation by again emulating the splendor of the princes on the Italian

mainland.*®” Before the Barbarigo doges, the coronation was a simple procedural rite held in the Senate Hall away from the dangerous crowds of popolani, who tended to confuse external pomp with personal power. After the Barbarigos the patricians struggled, fitfully it seems, against this new princely rite; they diminished the majesty of the doge by flanking the coronation “Alvise Mocenigo.” At the unpopular election of Nicolo Dona there was slight applause, and while he was carried around the Piazza the popolani chanted his competitors’ names and refused to pick up the money he gave out. Smith, Sir Henry Wotton, 2:138. 05 Mosto, I dogi di Venezia, p. xxviii.

106 On Gritti, see Sanuto, | diarii, 34:458. On Grimani, see Giomo, “Le spese del nobil uomo Marco Grimani.” Local tradition attributed the origin of ducal largess to the twelfth-century election of Sebastiano Ziani, the first doge chosen by electors rather than by the popular assembly. Contarini, De magistratibus et republica Venetorum, English version, p. 212, and Sanuto, Le vite dei dogi, p. 302. 7 Muraro, “La scala senza giganti.”

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